Chap.

 1    1|       induce you to reconsider the subject, and maturely weigh what
 2  Int|       various books written on the subject of education, and patiently
 3  Int|          the books written on this subject by men who, considering
 4  Int| inferiority of the sex; but as the subject lies in my way, and I cannot
 5  Int|   discussion naturally divides the subject. I shall first consider
 6  Int|           have only alluded to the subject, because it appears to me
 7  Int|            whenever I think of the subject, the dictates of experience
 8    1|            of properly sifting the subject, threw away the wheat with
 9    2|            who have written on the subject of female education and
10    2|            to that division of the subject, I shall advert to the passages
11    2|          wandering from my present subject, perhaps, to make a political
12    2|            the present, I wave the subject, and, instead of severely
13    2|          have thus spread over the subject! If women are by nature
14    2|         any serious thought on the subject, ever supposed that Eve
15    2|           her happiness on a being subject to like infirmities with
16    2|        touch on this branch of the subject. I will go still further,
17    2|      masculine.~ ~ But to view the subject in another point of view.
18    3|              Chap. III.~ ~The Same Subject Continued.~ ~  Bodily strength
19    3|           those men to whom she is subject, either by the laws of her
20    3|     forgotten. I shall pursue this subject still further, when I consider
21    3|             Far from attempting to subject him to her taste, she will
22    4|         this assertion to the main subject of the present chapter,
23    4|     descend to the minutiae of the subject.~ ~ I lament that women
24    4|           take another view of the subject, brought forward with a
25    4|      pertinent observations on the subject in Forster's Account of
26    4|            fortune offers. On this subject I mean to enlarge in a future
27    4|             and have done with the subject; women make their own clothes,
28    5|         formed to please and to be subject to him; and that it is her
29    5|      formed only to please, and be subject to man, the conclusion is
30    5|         and pains are necessary to subject boys to this motive.~ ~ '
31    5|           it was but consistent to subject them to authority independent
32    5|          cruel evils. They must be subject, all their lives, to the
33    5|           them the earlier on this subject; for if we were to wait
34    5|           speaking to them on this subject as long as they lived. Reason
35    5|           for that very reason, be subject to authority. Every daughter
36    5|            give a fair view of the subject, the reader may determine.~ ~ '
37    5|     because I mean to discuss that subject in a separate chapter.~ ~
38    5|         the superstructure.~ ~ The subject of amusements is treated
39    5|            who have written on the subject of female manners - it would,
40    5|           promises, they alone are subject to blind authority who have
41    5|            excellent essay on this subject by Mrs. Barbauld, in Miscellaneous
42    7|        moment.~ ~ But to state the subject in a different light. -
43    7|           dismiss this part of the subject, by saying, that till men
44    7|           take another view of the subject, confining my remarks to
45    7|           would never think of the subject more. Truth may always be
46    8|       knows where!~ ~ To view this subject in another light.~ ~ I have
47    8|     unnecessary to enlarge on this subject, if a constant attention
48    9|             that of propriety. Why subject her to propriety - blind
49    9|         poor African slaves, to be subject to prejudices that brutalize
50   10|            more fully discuss this subject when I treat of private
51   11|         continent are particularly subject to the views of their families,
52   11|      irregularities girls are more subject than boys. The will of those
53   12|  experience has led me to view the subject in a different light. I
54   12|      reasoning brings me back to a subject, on which I mean to dwell,
55   12|          Treating this part of the subject, I have borrowed some hints
56   12|          whatever light I view the subject, reason and experience convince
57   13|           assumed a body to become subject to mortal inspection, can
58   13|        that the discussion of this subject merely consists in opening
59   13|   explanatory remarks to bring the subject home to reason - to that
60   13|            I have conversed on the subject, allowed to be well founded;
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