Chap.

 1  Int|           expected to act: - they dress; they paint, and nickname
 2    2|          cultivate a fondness for dress, because a fondness for
 3    2|            because a fondness for dress, he asserts, is natural
 4    2|        state the soul was fond of dress, and brought this inclination
 5    3|     reflections, the fondness for dress, conspicuous in women, may
 6    4|   children, it is, in general, to dress them in a costly manner -
 7    4|        children. They are only to dress and live to please them:
 8    4|         mind; but the frippery of dress. For when a woman in the
 9    4|           when women work only to dress better than they could otherwise
10    4|          the manual part of their dress, consequently only their
11    4|          deportment of women, who dress merely for the sake of dressing.
12    5|          earliest infancy fond of dress. Not content with being
13    5|           art of pleasing lies in dress; and this is all which children
14    5|           desirous to know how to dress up her doll, to make its
15    5|      Beauty cannot be acquired by dress, and coquetry is an art
16    5|       when she might employ it to dress like Sophia. 'Her dress
17    5|           dress like Sophia. 'Her dress is extremely modest in appearance,
18    5|            that every part of her dress, simple as it seems, was
19    5|          a preacher descanting on dress and needle-work; and still
20    6|      called forth to adjust their dress, 'a passion for a scarlet
21    7|          to be taught to wash and dress alone, without any distinction
22    7|        took half as much pains to dress habitually neat, as they
23    7|           of mind. But women only dress to gratify men of gallantry;
24   12|           immoderate fondness for dress and dissipation carries
25   13|        could not vie with them in dress and parade.~ ~ With respect
26   13|         render women very fond of dress, and produce all the vanity
27   13|           contagious fondness for dress so common to weak women,
28   13| civilization.~ ~ The attention to dress, therefore, which has been
29   13|          not particularly fond of dress. Their clothes were their
30   13|    analogy, that the fondness for dress, so extravagant in females,
31   13|           immoderate fondness for dress, for pleasure, and for sway,
32   13|          cultivate a fondness for dress, in order to please, and
33   13|       still people the world, and dress to please man - all the
34   13|           fashionable vagaries of dress, the management of their
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