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Notes on Reading Rollin’s foreign:french maniere d’enseigner et d’étudier les Belles Lettres /foreign:

C11.

The instruction of Youth has three principal objects, Science, Morals, and Religion; by the First the understanding is cultivated and adorned with all the knowledge it is capable of; by the Second the deletion unclear /deletion heart is rectified and awakened by principles of honour and unclear, and by the last the edifice is completed by forming a true Christian.

The Regulations of Henry IV. for the University of Paris begin to this effect;

,, that the felicity of Nation’s particularly ,,of Christian States, depend on the good education of the Youth, to which is to dispose them with propriety to fill the stations that are their ,,lots, without which they would be unclear to unclear.

Culture does not more improve land than education does unclear.

Just as far as it relates to the reading authors and compositions is a delicaty of ^add quick, and precise /add discernment, of the beauty, truth, and just ends of thought and expressions contained in a discourse; and of percieving all the faults that produce a contrary effect; this is easier felt than expressed, and is more the effect of judgement than genius; the want of this occasions unclear brilliantcy of style