Chap.

 1    3|     other; and, in a word, that bashfulness and modesty with which nature
 2    7|        mean to confound it with bashfulness in the other. Bashfulness,
 3    7|       bashfulness in the other. Bashfulness, in fact, is so distinct
 4    7|        most impudent; for their bashfulness being merely the instinctive
 5    7|          They trample on virgin bashfulness with a sort of bravado,
 6    7|         the playful, bewitching bashfulness of youth.*~ ~ * Modesty,
 7    7|        calm virtue of maturity; bashfulness, the charm of vivacious
 8    7| husbands? After their maidenish bashfulness is once lost, I, in fact,
 9    7|      modesty will take place of bashfulness. They may find it prudent
10    7|         maturity, which succeed bashfulness, to which truth is sacrificed,
11   12|     infallibly lose that decent bashfulness, which might have ripened
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