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PRE FACE.

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CTOR

OCTOR FORDyce's excellent Ser

mons for Young Women in some meafure gave

rise to the following compilation. In that work, where he fo judiciously points out all the defects of female conduct to remedy them, and all the proper studies which they should pursue, with a view to improvement, Poetry is one to which he particularly would attach them. He only objects to the danger of pursuing this charming study through all the immoralities and false pictures of hap

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piness with which it abounds, and thus becoming the martyr of innocent curiosity.

In the following compilation care has been taken to select, not only such pieces as innocence may read without a blush, but such as will even tend to strengthen that innocence.

In this little work a Lady may find the most exquisite pleasure, while she is at the same time learning the duties of life; and, while she courts only entertainment, be deceived into wisdom. Indeed, this would be too great a boast in the preface to any original work; but here it can be made with fafety, as every Poem in the following collection would singly have procured an Author great reputation.

They are divided into Devotional, Moral, and Entertaining, thus comprehending the three great duties of life; that which we owe to GOD, to our neighbour, and to ourselves.

In the first part, it must be confessed, our English Poets have not very much excelled.

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In that department, namely, the praise of our Maker, by which Poetry began, and from which it deviated by time, we are most faultily deficient.

There are one or two, however, particularly the Deity, by Mr. Boyse; a Poem, when it first came out, that lay for some time neglected, till introduced to public notice by Mr. Hervey and Mr. Fielding. In it the Reader will perceive many striking pictures, and perhaps glow with a part of that gratitude which seems to have inspired the Writer.

In the Moral part I am more copious, from the same reason, because our language contains a large number of the kind. Voltaire, talking of our Poets, gives them the ference in moral pieces to those of any

other nation; and indeed no Poets have better settled the bounds of duty, or more precisely determined the rules for conduct in life than ours.

In this department the fair Reader will find the Muse has been solicitous

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to guide her, not with the allurements of a fyren, but the integrity of a friend.

In the Entertaining part my greatest difficulty was what to reject. The materials lay in such plenty, that I was bewildered in my choice ; in this case then I was solely determined by the tendency of the Poem; and where I found one, however well executed, that seemed in the least tending to distort: the judgment, or inflame the imagination, it was excluded without mercy. have here and there indeed, when one of particular beauty offered with a few blemishes, lopt off the defects, and thus, like the tyrant, who fitted all strangers to the bed he had prepared for them, I have inserted fome, by first adapting them to my plan; we only differ in this, that he mutilated with a bad design, I from motives of a contrary nature.

It will be easier to condemn a compilation of this kind, than to prove its inutility. While young Ladies are readers, and while

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