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Original stories from real life / With conversations, calculated to regulate the affections, and form the mind to truth and goodness. cover

Original stories from real life / With conversations, calculated to regulate the affections, and form the mind to truth and goodness.

Chapter 3: INTRODUCTION.
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About This Book

A series of moral conversations and illustrative tales follows two young girls placed under the care of an older woman who guides their habits and understanding. Through dialogues, parables, and brief stories the narrator addresses everyday moral topics—treatment of animals, anger, truthfulness, pride, charity, industriousness, devotion, dress, and behaviour toward servants—showing consequences of vice and benefits of virtue. Practical scenes and character sketches, often set in domestic and village contexts, model good conduct and propose gradual, example-based education. The collection closes with practical advice for continued moral formation, including reflections on letter-writing, employments, and the cultivation of sincere manners.

INTRODUCTION.

Mary and Caroline, though the children of wealthy parents were, in their infancy, left entirely to the management of servants, or people equally ignorant. Their mother died suddenly, and their father, who found them very troublesome at home, placed them under the tuition of a woman of tenderness and discernment, a near relation, who was induced to take on herself the important charge through motives of compassion.

They were shamefully ignorant, considering that Mary had been fourteen, and Caroline twelve years in the world. If they had been merely ignorant, the talk would not have appeared so arduous; but they had caught every prejudice that the vulgar casually instill. In order to eradicate these prejudices, and substitute good habits instead of those they had carelessly contracted, Mrs. Mason never suffered them to be out of her sight. They were allowed to ask questions on all occasions, a method she would not have adopted, had she educated them from the first, according to the suggestions of her own reason, to which experience had given its sanction.

They had tolerable capacities; but Mary had a turn for ridicule, and Caroline was vain of her person. She was, indeed, very handsome, and the inconsiderate encomiums that had, in her presence, been lavished on her beauty made her, even at that early age, affected.