Chap.

1    1|    waiting to inquire whether the evils which his ardent soul turned
2    3|         it against the inevitable evils of life."' Mr. Day's Sandford
3    4|      light of day.~ ~ Most of the evils of life arise from a desire
4    5|          but to suffer more cruel evils. They must be subject, all
5    5| sufferings which arise from those evils it hath caused us.'~ ~ And
6    5|           people to encounter the evils of life with dignity and
7    5|     advantages it procures or the evils it averts, if any great
8    9|    poisoned fountain, most of the evils and vices which render this
9   12|         of the physical and moral evils that torment mankind, as
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