chap_r(); <span style="color:grey">Oo t pursuits of man,
<span style="color:grey">Friendly to t, to virtue and to peace,
tranger er, must not con?ne ions to tropolis.
go forto try; sojourn in villages and s; visit castles, villas, farm-tages; loiter about country ctend ivals; and cope ions, and all ts and humors.
In some countries, ties absorb tion; t and intelligent society, and try is ined almost entirely by boorisry. In England, on trary, tropolis is a mere gate classes, ion of to a y and dissipation, and, urn again to tly more congenial s of rural life. ty are tired neig ranks.
t, are strongly gifted he rural feeling.
ty to ties of nature, and a keen reliss of try.
t in tants of cities, born and brougling streets, enter y into rural s, and evince a tact for rural occupation. t reat in ty of tropolis, ion of uring of s, as of erprise. Even tunate individuals, of din and traf?c, contrive to s of nature. In t dark and dingy quarters of ty, tly a bank of ?o capable of vegetation s grass-plot and ?os mimic park, laid out uresque taste, and gleaming h refreshing verdure.
to to form an unfavorable opinion of er. racted by ts t dissipate time, t, and feeling, in tropolis. oo commonly, a look of raction. o be, of going some alking on one subject, o anot, ing ime so as to pay ts allotted to tropolis, like London, is calculated to make men sel?sere