Chap.

 1  Int|         blooming I attribute to a false system of education, gathered
 2  Int|         of women are enfeebled by false refinement; that the books
 3  Int|  unadorned truth; and a deluge of false sentiments and over-stretched
 4    1|        perfection.~ ~ Reared on a false hypothesis his arguments
 5    2|      drawn out of their sphere by false refinement, and not by an
 6    2|      enervated by confinement and false notions of modesty, the
 7    2|         natural; but arises, like false ambition in men, from a
 8    3|        which has given force to a false conclusion, in which an
 9    3|       always see things through a false medium.~ ~ Pursuing these
10    3|           or innocence tainted by false shame, will always be a
11    3| artificial notions of beauty, and false descriptions of sensibility,
12    4|         by viewing education in a false light; not considering it
13    4|          must call it so, has the false system of female manners
14    4|         therefore, so weakened by false refinement, that, respecting
15    4|     apprehend that they reason on false ground, led astray by the
16    4|    majority of women sickly - and false notions of female excellence
17    5|           such religion should be false, that docility which induces
18    5|      their passions, nourished by false views of life, and permitted
19    5|         world stripped of all its false delusive charms. The clear
20    5|     principles are as practically false as they are abstractly true.*
21    6|     sexual character to the mind. False notions of beauty and delicacy
22    7|     creature's mind by instilling false delicacy, or those indecent
23    8|   measuring of shadows produced a false calculation, because their
24    8|        cruel mother when she is a false and faithless wife. If her
25    8|       dirt on a pure character. A false light distorted, for a short
26    8|       salvation of the rest. But, false as every assertion might
27    9|    through one medium, and that a false one, they are unable to
28    9|      merit and happiness consist. False, indeed, must be the light
29   10|           true can be practically false; but disdaining the shifts
30   12|       compliments that shine with false lustre in the heartless
31   12|      selfish vanity, will throw a false light over the objects which
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