Chap.

 1    2|         man; and should they be beautiful, every thing else is needless,
 2    2|      have neither been the most beautiful nor the most gentle of their
 3    2|        exotics, and be reckoned beautiful flaws in nature.~ ~  As
 4    5|         to tell me that Moses's beautiful, poetical cosmogony, and
 5    5|          and what some may call beautiful, the understanding is neglected,
 6    5| granting that woman ought to be beautiful, innocent, and silly, to
 7    5| self-existent, there is nothing beautiful but what is ideal.'~ ~ But
 8    5|         when they are young and beautiful; consequently, it is their
 9    5|        abstractedly, is thought beautiful, and wisdom sublime. Admiration
10    7|    horizon. Nothing can be more beautiful than the poetical fiction,
11    9|       only a respectable, but a beautiful sight. So singular, indeed,
12   12|        particular man; but that beautiful limbs and features were
13   12|       by a servile copy of even beautiful nature. Yet, independent
14   12|         must have been far more beautiful than it is at present, because
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