Chap.

 1    1| privileges.~ ~ I wish, Sir, to set some investigations of this
 2    1|     close investigation; but a set of shallow reasoners are
 3    1|        these feelings were not set in motion to improve our
 4    1|        vicious.~ ~ Nothing can set the regal character in a
 5    1|      occasional residence of a set of idle superficial young
 6    2|        inferior far beneath me set?~ ~ 'Among unequals what
 7    2|     they begin to ferment, and set the understanding to work
 8    5|     and are never permitted to set themselves above those opinions.
 9    5|     mode of behaviour, than to set the reason to work; but,
10    5|      rest when justice is thus set as defiance? With the same
11    5|      idol which he had himself set up - how ridiculous! But
12    5|       cherish opinions only to set reason at defiance? This
13    6|     ridiculed for repeating 'a set of phrases learnt by rote,'
14    6|    deepen their impression and set the imagination to work,
15    6|       the hopes and fears that set in motion their sluggish
16    7| inflame their imaginations and set their little minds to work,
17    7|      furnished with ideas, and set to work to compare them,
18    8|      the virtues of great men, set off each other; and though
19    8|      virtue and its shadow are set at variance. We should never,
20    8|    they associate with men who set reputation at defiance.~ ~
21    9| necessity, of some kind, first set the wheels in motion. Virtue
22   12|      neither does it contain a set of weaker men than those
23   12|       dogmatical, or luxurious set of men, than the pedantic
24   12|        their silly hearts were set. Not allowed to dispose
25   13|        and friendship are also set at defiance, and that purity
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