Chap.

 1    2|       in a lower key; but I am afraid it would have been the whine
 2    4|        affection, which she is afraid openly to oppose; and neither
 3    4|     scarcely be remedied, I am afraid, in the slightest degree;
 4    5| weaknesses, and errors. He was afraid lest the austerity of reason
 5    7|        shrunk back irresolute, afraid of trusting to himself the
 6    8|      obvious comment; but I am afraid that morality is very insidiously
 7    9|     allot to them, though I am afraid the word midwife, in our
 8   12|       what they think; neither afraid of being reproved for their
 9   12|      himself, and who is often afraid to marry lest he should
10   13|   secluded from the world, and afraid to speak in her mother's
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