Chap.

 1  Int|     sentiment, and refinement of taste, are almost synonymous with
 2  Int|          the tongue, vitiate the taste, and create a kind of sickly
 3    2|         women will come in for a taste; but, from the imperfect
 4    2|  inelegant husband may shock her taste without destroying her peace
 5    2|     should avoid cultivating her taste, lest her husband should
 6    2|          what use is an improved taste, if the individual be not
 7    2|        are not opened. People of taste, married or single, without
 8    2|        whole sum of enjoyment is taste to be denominated a blessing?~ ~ *
 9    3|       accomplishments which have taste for their object; for as
10    3|       should have such a correct taste as to neglect the pleasing
11    3|         thought a distinguishing taste and puny appetite the height
12    3|         a matter of sentiment or taste.~ ~ To return from this
13    3| attempting to subject him to her taste, she will accommodate herself
14    4|    rendered susceptible, and the taste formed; for I am apt to
15    4|    neither greatness of mind nor taste. The intellectual world
16    4|      despise. The sentiments and taste of more cultivated minds
17    4|         foundation of principles taste is superficial, grace must
18    4|          disgust every person of taste. In the countenance of girls
19    4|    subjected to the decisions of taste.~ ~ It would almost provoke
20    4|         wanton who exercises her taste to render her passion alluring,
21    4|          consequently only their taste is exercised, and they acquire,
22    5|        sex has also its peculiar taste to distinguish in this particular.
23    5|         from whence we see their taste plainly adapted to their
24    5|    requires knowledge, the other taste; the principal object of
25    5|          charms of sincerity, or taste the pleasure arising from
26    5|      voluptuous gratifications a taste for more refined enjoyments;
27    5|         anxious to cultivate her taste; though they must be allowed
28    5|         sinned against sense and taste.~ ~ I particularly object
29    5|       contributed to vitiate the taste, and enervate the understanding
30    5|           as well as in works of taste, we should be observant
31    6|        naturally revolt. Without taste, excepting of the lighter
32    6|         of the lighter kind, for taste is the offspring of judgment,
33    6|     necessary that sentiment and taste varnish the enormities of
34    8|          ever be the standard of taste, the gauge of appetite -
35    8|          both sexes, because the taste of men is vitiated; and
36    8|         behaviour to gratify the taste by which they obtain pleasure
37    9|    situation in the world, but a taste for literature, to throw
38   12|        than any other emotion of taste; but I contend that the
39   12|        boy, though few people of taste were ever disgusted by that
40   12|      ever be a want of heart and taste, and the harlot's rouge
41   12|        it cannot tell what!~ ~ A taste for the fine arts requires
42   12| cultivation; but not more than a taste for the virtuous affections;
43   12|         the minutiae of domestic taste; lacking judgment, the foundation
44   12|  judgment, the foundation of all taste. For the understanding,
45   12|         down, that a man of true taste returns to, again and again
46   12|          pencil of fire.~ ~ True taste is ever the work of the
47   12|         them to possess domestic taste. Their lively senses will
48   12|          is the want of domestic taste, and not the acquirement
49   12|      might acquire that domestic taste which would lead them to
50   12|        the legitimate parents of taste. A woman of talents, if
51   13|      equally tend to corrupt the taste, and draw the heart aside
52   13|       and equally shew a want of taste and modesty. Ignorant women,
53   13|          carry the same vitiated taste into life, and fly for amusement
54   13|        interest them, have not a taste for literature, and they
55   13|          arts that cultivate the taste.~ ~ But, visiting to display
56   13|            some sensual wight of taste would scale the heavens
57   13|     defiance, and that purity of taste is vitiated which would
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