Chap.

 1    2|          herself for comfort, and cultivate her dormant faculties? or,
 2    2|  Daughters.~ ~ He advises them to cultivate a fondness for dress, because
 3    2|        the present scene, let her cultivate her understanding without
 4    2|           associate with him; but cultivate their minds, give them the
 5    5|        first concern should be to cultivate the former; this order is
 6    5|       children are capacitated to cultivate of that art.'~ ~ 'Here then
 7    5| reasonable, therefore, she should cultivate both?' Greatness of mind
 8    5|         have a young Englishwoman cultivate her agreeable talents, in
 9    5|            were I only anxious to cultivate her taste; though they must
10    5|           allowed by moralists to cultivate, as Nature directs, different
11    6|           careful should we be to cultivate the understanding, to save
12    7|          men were only anxious to cultivate each virtue, and let it
13    9|          herself by neglecting to cultivate an affection that would
14   11|          always resembles that we cultivate; so that natural affections,
15   12|        leave their harams, do not cultivate their understandings, in
16   13|        that it is woman's duty to cultivate a fondness for dress, in
17   13|         one of the fine arts that cultivate the taste.~ ~ But, visiting
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