FAIRY PALACE. 147 her anxious to avoid whatever might offend, and do whatever might be pleasics to so kind and amiable a being, Whos. superior power appeared to be the consequence of superior excellence: * Wiaat would the Fairy Peribanou say to this, or that, ?” was a question ofien addressed by Rosa to herself, and sometimes to_ Dame Morgan. ‘“ If I please the Fairy, and you, my dear Nurse,” said she one day, ‘* I cannot, _you know, do wrong.”—‘ The Fairy will always give you good instruction,” said Dame Morgan, “ and you will please me if you will attend to it, as I think aud hope you will; but it is to God Almighty that you are to give an. accotiat of your actions, and not to the Fairy. God sees and knows ‘every thing—you are always in his presence, 02 though