A FRIENDLY VISIT TO THE HOUSE OF MOURNING. In the day of adversity confider. Eccl. vii. 14. LONDON: PRINTED IN THE YEAR M DCC XCT. A FRIENDLY VISIT, &c. YOUR prefent affliction, my Dear Friend, demands fomething more than the usual forms of condolence.-Sorrow, which, like yours, cannot be prevented, may yet be alleviated, and improved. If in thus addreffing you I feem to intrude, let my motive be my apology. Having felt how much better it is to go to the house of mourning than to the house of feafting." Having received my beft Leffons, Companions, and even Comforts in it, I would administer from my little stock of experience: and while I thus endeavour to affift your meditations, a Eccl. vii. 2. A 2 a fhall |