Chap.

 1  Int|         spend many of the first years of their lives in acquiring
 2    2| needless, for, at least, twenty years of their lives.~ ~ Thus
 3    2|      obliged to submit to a few years of discipline. But in the
 4    2|     made for the more important years of life, when reflection
 5    2|        graces, though for a few years they may procure the individuals
 6    5|        s opinion that the first years of youth should be employed
 7    5|        knowledge, the important years of youth, the usefulness
 8   11|        that they had a thousand years ago - and not a jot more?
 9   11|         any account; yet twenty years of solicitude call for a
10   11|       to marry for two or three years, should the object of his
11   12|   recollected with pleasure the years he spent in close confinement,
12   12|     dependence, many, very many years, and still we hear of nothing
13   12|     children, from five to nine years of age, ought to be absolutely
14   12|   acquire, during the important years of youth, is merely relative
15   13|       that after fifty or sixty years of feverish existence, it
Best viewed with any browser at 800x600 or 768x1024 on Tablet PC
IntraText® (VA1) - Some rights reserved by EuloTech SRL - 1996-2009. Content in this page is licensed under a Creative Commons License