Chap.

 1    2| fellow-creatures. Why have men of superiour endowments submitted to
 2    4|      compared with angels; yet, a superiour order of beings should be
 3    4|            has made even women of superiour sense adopt the same sentiments.*(
 4    4|       esteem of a small number of superiour people.~ ~ When do we hear
 5    4|         in love till a man with a superiour fortune offers. On this
 6    5|           his slave: it is by her superiour art and ingenuity that she
 7    5|        itself little?~ ~ Men have superiour strength of body; but were
 8    5|          grace of body, than that superiour gracefulness which is truly
 9    5|      assumes, without knowing it, superiour dignity and new graces;
10    5|           one reason why men have superiour judgment, and more fortitude
11    5|    performed for the amusement of superiour beings. How would they be
12    6|          recur to reason and rise superiour to a system of oppression,
13    6|          When do they, with their superiour powers and advantages, turn
14    6|  friendship of a reformed rake of superiour abilities, what is the consequence
15    7|          when they boast of their superiour delicacy, is a solecism
16    8|           and claims kindred with superiour natures. Virtues, unobserved
17    9|         lamenting that women of a superiour cast have not a road open
18    9|          civilized man.~ ~ In the superiour ranks of life, every duty
19    9|            are menial; and when a superiour education enables them to
20    9|           have understandings far superiour to the common run of understandings,
21   12| remembered; nay, I appeal to many superiour men, who were educated in
22   12|      exalted imagination might be superiour to the materials which the
23   12|           and even the virtues of superiour men, will always give women,
24   12|        him determine to find some superiour virtues in the being whom
25   12|         on a level with men, some superiour woman, like the Greek courtezans,
26   12|   acquired a portion of knowledge superiour to that of the rest of their
27   13|         are supposed to receive a superiour education, flock to his
28   13|        reward, or consequence, of superiour temperance and piety. But
29   13|     raised above their fellows by superiour temperance or sanctity.
30   13|     induce them to read something superiour; for I coincide in opinion
31   13|      reading novels some women of superiour talents learned to despise
32   13|          in its essence from this superiour gracefulness.~ ~ A strong
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