Chap.

1    4|    who ape their fashions and faults without sharing their advantages.
2    5|  levity, and inconstancy, are faults that readily spring up from
3    5|     vices, and always full of faults, she ought to learn betimes
4    5|      against her, as well our faults, as her own timidity and
5    6|   cruel, to upbraid them with faults that can scarcely be avoided,
6   11|     to make allowance for the faults of their parents, because
7   12| trouble, punish with severity faults that the patient fortitude
8   13|    done, if done hastily, the faults, which they would never
9   13|  attempted to extenuate their faults; but to prove them to be
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