Chap.

 1  Int|           observed the conduct of parents and the management of schools;
 2    4|       often cruelly left by their parents without any provision; and,
 3    4|         what children of the same parents had an equal right to. In
 4    5| respecting religion, he makes her parents thus address her, accustomed
 5    5|       useful hints, that sensible parents will certainly avail themselves
 6    5|          only blind submission to parents; but to the opinion of the
 7    5|          acquire judgment itself, parents expect them to act in the
 8    5|       they enter life, what their parents are at the close. They do
 9    8|        respective ranks, by their parents. If an innocent girl become
10    8|           the children whom their parents could not maintain; whilst
11   10|         calculations of weakness. Parents often love their children
12   11|               Chap. XI.~ ~Duty to Parents.~ ~ There seems to be an
13   11|        King of kings; and that of parents from our first parent.~ ~
14   11|            and not a jot more? If parents discharge their duty they
15   11|           their children; but few parents are willing to receive the
16   11|        and accidental duty due to parents.~ ~ The parent who sedulously
17   11|       friend.~ ~ But, respect for parents is, generally speaking,
18   11|       rise from the negligence of parents; and still these are the
19   11|       under the dominion of their parents; and few parents think of
20   11|         of their parents; and few parents think of addressing their
21   11|              A slavish bondage to parents cramps every faculty of
22   11|           more kept down by their parents, in every sense of the word,
23   11|      slavishly to submit to their parents, they are prepared for the
24   11|        abject. I also lament that parents, indolently availing themselves
25   11|      self-love. But it is not the parents who have given the surest
26   11|           favour the indolence of parents, who insist on a privilege
27   11|       teach them to despise their parents. Children cannot, ought
28   11|           for the faults of their parents, because every such allowance
29   11|        weakens the force of their parents, because every such allowance
30   11|          differently constituted, parents, I fear, will still insist
31   12|          representatives of their parents.~ ~ Can it then be a matter
32   12|          did not first love their parents, their brothers, sisters,
33   12|     entirely separated from their parents, and I question whether
34   12|       dependent on the caprice of parents, little exertion can be
35   12|          of a master's giving the parents some sample of the boys
36   12| school-masters depend entirely on parents for a subsistence; and,
37   12|          disdained to bubble weak parents by practising the secret
38   12|          are equally stunted, for parents are often only in quest
39   12|         for the recreation of the parents; who, of a Sunday, visit
40   12|          by six of the children's parents.~ ~ * Treating this part
41   12|       agree with the views of the parents, for it will be a long time,
42   12|           so far enlightened that parents, only anxious to render
43   12|         and fancy, the legitimate parents of taste. A woman of talents,
44   12|          nurses of their infants, parents, and husbands; for the bills
45   13|           inherit from both their parents, for all the hardly earned
46   13|       friendship subsists between parents. Virtue flies from a house
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