Domestic Pleasures, or, the Happy Fire-side by Frances Bowyer Vaux
page 62 of 198 (31%)
page 62 of 198 (31%)
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me, mamma, what you meant by saying, that division of natural history
called the animal kingdom. Are there, then, many divisions? _Mrs. B._ There are three, my dear. The first consisting of Minerals; the second, of Vegetables; and the third, of Animals. _Mr. B._ Well, my dears, now do not forget what you have been already told, and another day we will talk further on this subject: for the present, let us attend to our history. We concluded with the death of Ancus Martius. Who succeeded to the crown, Emily? _Emily._ Lucius Tarquinius Priscus. He was the son of a merchant of Corinth, which is a large city of Greece. This man had acquired a considerable fortune by trade, which was inherited by his son Lucumo, who took the name of Tarquinius, from Tarquinia, a city of Hetruria, where his wife Tanaquil lived, previous to her marriage. His birth being considered contemptible by the nobles of this place, he, by his wife's persuasions, settled in Rome, where merit alone gave distinction. _Mr. B._ What remarkable circumstance is said to have occurred to him on his way thither, Ferdinand? _Ferdinand._ As he approached the city gate, historians say, that an eagle, stooping from above, took off his hat, and, after flying round his chariot for some time, with a great noise, put it on again. From this circumstance, his wife, Tanaquil, foretold that he would one day wear the crown. _Mr. B._ By what means, Edward, did he obtain this object of his ambition? |
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