Chap.

 1    1|  wanderer, that man was born to run the circle of life and death,
 2    2|        on, and the current will run with destructive fury when
 3    3|      departing from one extreme run into another, may easily
 4    3| imagination had been allowed to run wild, and refine on the
 5    3|    accidentally been allowed to run wild - as some of the elegant
 6    5|     recur to this principle, we run wide of the mark, and all
 7    5|   profound questions, we should run a risk of never speaking
 8    7|       for the day, and ready to run their course with the sun.
 9    8|        leading principles which run through all my disquisitions,
10    9|        let his virtuous fervour run in a more placid, but not
11    9|         superiour to the common run of understandings, taking
12   10|      which makes women so often run into extremes, and either
13   13|   injudiciously been allowed to run wild; for every violation
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