Chap.

 1    1|           for what man of sense and feeling can doubt it! - gave life
 2    2|      romantic unnatural delicacy of feeling, waste their* lives in imagining
 3    2|         attain conscious dignity by feeling themselves only dependent
 4    4|             every momentary gust of feeling. Civilized women are, therefore,
 5    4|   calculated to excite emotion; and feeling, when they should reason,
 6    4|            and ferocious, slaves of feeling.~ ~ Numberless are the arguments,
 7    4|       social virtue, I cannot avoid feeling the most lively compassion
 8    5|             man, or a woman, of any feeling, must always wish to convince
 9    5|             her own choice, without feeling any emotions of passion,
10    5|          till every enlarged social feeling, in a word, - humanity,
11    5| circumspection damped each generous feeling before it had left any permanent
12    6|             with more precision, of feeling, receives new force when
13    6|          Reasoning then, as well as feeling, the only province of woman,
14    7|           unawares on fairy ground, feeling the balmy gale of spring
15   13|           strange want of sense and feeling! think themselves degraded
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