Chap.

 1    4|          and anxious, their over exercised sensibility not only renders
 2    4|       and this sympathy has been exercised from their youth up. A husband
 3    4|   instructed their children, and exercised their own minds. Gardening,
 4    4| consequently only their taste is exercised, and they acquire, by thinking
 5    7|       whose affections have been exercised by humane plans of usefulness,
 6   11|         resembling the authority exercised by the favourites of absolute
 7   11|       their hearts, the child of exercised sympathy and reason, and
 8   12|       children might be usefully exercised, for at this age they should
 9   12|        whose minds have not been exercised. To render the person perfect,
10   13|        because never having been exercised, its slumbering energies
11   13|     which the affections are not exercised, cannot be said to improve
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