"Entered, according to act of Congress, in the year 1831, by G. & C. & H. Carvill, in the office of the Clerk of the Southern District of New York." Sleight & Robinson, Printers. 990 54-83 55-2 THE WEB OF OUR LIFE IS OF A MINGLED YARN, GOOD AND ILL TOGETHER; OUR VIRTUES WOULD BE PROUD, IF OUR FAULTS WHIPPED THEM NOT; AND OUR CRIMES WOULD DESPAIR, IF THEY WERE NOT CHERISHED BY OUR VIRTUES. All's Well that Ends Well. CONTENTS OF THE SECOND VOLUME. CHAP. XXXV. A fit of filial piety. Jeremy visits his native village finds one of his parents no longer able to meet his affection, and the other fast verging to the same state. A death-bed, CHAP. XXXVI. A funeral. Excessive amiability of CHAP. XXXVII. Jeremy becomes debauched - learns that there are some persons, in whose estimation wealth is not an equivalent for virtue, CHAP. XXXVIII. Jeremy pays his court to rank, and becomes a favourite with several dissipated PAGE |