Chap.

 1    1|          back to first principles, vice skulks, with all its native
 2    1|      vestiges of barbarism. He saw vice tramping on virtue, and
 3    1|        unnatural crimes, and every vice that degrades our nature,
 4    1|            polished manners render vice more dangerous, by concealing
 5    1|             become dead weights of vice and folly on the community.
 6    2|          scrupulous exactness when vice reigns in the heart.~ ~
 7    3|          serves as a fence against vice?~ ~ Such a woman is not
 8    3|            practising or fostering vice, evidently lose the rank
 9    3|       example of folly, not to say vice, will she be to her innocent
10    4|         source of female folly and vice has ever appeared to me
11    4|      difference between virtue and vice: - and thus prepared by
12    5|           extract the grossness of vice. He did not go back to nature,
13    5|           see a folly swell into a vice, by almost imperceptible
14    5|          betrayed his brother into vice. Those who are entering
15    6|          of women, whose trade was vice; and allurements, wanton
16    6|          varnish the enormities of vice, and give a zest to brutal
17    7|      sensibility into folly - into vice;* and the dreadful reckoning
18    8|           during the indulgence of vice. It was natural for women
19    9|            empty compliments which vice and folly are obliged to
20    9|         more disgraceful than even vice, is not morality cut to
21   10|       surest preservatives against vice. Natural affection, as it
22   12|         regulated, the hot-beds of vice and folly, and the knowledge
23   12|       mischief; and of the senior, vice. Besides, in great schools,
24   12|           become the forerunner of vice: for every way of exhibiting
25   12|           the numerous examples of vice and oppression which the
26   12|    reservoir, sends off streams of vice to corrupt the constituent
27   13|       forcibly shewn the nature of vice; that thus learning to know
28   13|           to shew the malignity of vice, for the purpose of reformation.
29   13| refinements they plump into actual vice.~ ~ These are the women
30   13|          the seeds of almost every vice in the soil thus forcibly
31   13|        only the tinsel-covering of vice; for whilst wealth renders
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