Chap.

 1  Int|         they have the strongest claim to pity; the education of
 2    2|        rather than assert their claim to pursue reasonable pleasures
 3    3|         the rights of man; - or claim the privilege of moral beings,
 4    4|        out of obscurity, boldly claim respect on account of their
 5    4|   species. Men cannot, however, claim any natural superiority
 6    5|       or men, who having little claim to respect as individuals,
 7    5|     mere animal spirits have no claim to the kindnesses of affection!~ ~
 8    5|         those to which it has a claim! And in attempting to diminish
 9    8|        respect has that woman a claim, on the score of modesty,
10    9|          to which those have no claim who do not discharge its
11    9|      and, as a fellow-creature, claim, in the name of my sex,
12   11|        a strong hold and sacred claim on the gratitude of their
13   13| undertake. Yet the men who laid claim to this privilege, out of
14   13|      not any inherent rights to claim; and, by the same rule,
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