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Thomas. Well, William, and how do you think you like our school?

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You

have been here, now, two or three months; quite long enough to judge whether you like our way of going on,

or not.

William. Why I like the school very much.

T. The reason why I ask is, that I thought, when you first came, you looked rather sad and cast down. I have been here, myself, for several years, and I like it so well, that I rather wondered to see you so sorrowful at coming amongst us.

W. Why, I can't say that I ever liked school before; and when my father and mother took me from my old school, I was glad, because I thought I should get rid of the trouble of learning, and the plague of going to school at all; but then, when they brought me here, I thought all my troubles were beginning again.

80?

T. Well, and have not you found it

W. No: I have not found half the trouble in learning, here, that I did in my other school. I remember that I usedt o read straight on; and, if I came to a hard word, and I could not read

it, then I got scolded, or rapped on the pate; and, as this happened at almost every lesson, I hated my lesson, and was in a fright every time I went up to the master.

T. Why that was the way to make you hate your lessons, to be sure.

W. Yes, and I did not understand much about the meaning of the lessons either, so that I had no pleasure in them; and the school-time used to seem so long and so dull, that I thought it never would be over.

T. I have heard almost all boys at other schools, say that their schoolhours appeared so very long; but I think, at our National Schools, the time seems to slip away fast enough, and the lessons don't seem so tiresome, as boys at other schools complain of.

IV. No; because here we are always employed, constantly doing something; we are at reading, or writing, or arithmetic, all the time; and so we do not see how quickly the time passes. And, besides, we are made to understand every word we read, and so it is pleasant and agreeable: as we have always short lessons, and are questioned abo

the meaning of every part of the lesson, it is not possible to help learning something upon this plan: that " questioning and answering" is, to be sure, a capital plan.

T. Yes, I have always thought so.

W. Why what can be the use of reading at all, if we do not understand what we are reading about? I have gone over lessons in the Bible, without understanding a word about what it all meant; but we can't do so here. And then we always were used to say one of Watts's Hymns; but as we were never asked the meaning of it, I always thought it a sort of task, and I did not like it at all. But now I delight in learning those hymus, and I think them quite beautiful.

T. Why, certainly, nobody can like a thing that he does not understand. But now, William, as you talk of Watts's Hymns, suppose we ask one another a few questions in them, for the sake of practice: it may do us both good.

W. Why, I should like it very well, Thomas.

T. Suppose then we take the first

nin.

W. Come then; I will repeat the Hymn first, and then you shall question me.

T. Very well.

William repeats.

1.

How glorious is our heavenly King,
Who reigns above the sky!
How shall a child presume to sing
His dreadful Majesty?

II.

How great his pow'r is none can tell,
Nor think how large his grace;
Not men below, nor saints that dwell
On high before his face.

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Not angels that stand round the Lord
Can search his secret will;

But they perform his heav'nly word,
And sing his praises still.

IV.

Then let me join this holy train,
And my first off'rings bring;
Th' eternal God will not disdain
To hear an infant sing.

V.

My heart resolves, my tongue obeys,
And angels shall rejoice

To hear their mighty Maker's praise
Sound from a feeble voice.

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