Chap.

1    4|         motive is simply vanity. The wanton who exercises her taste
2    5|            teach her to practise the wanton arts of a mistress, termed
3    6|           was vice; and allurements, wanton airs. They would recollect
4    7| distinguished from rustic shyness or wanton skittishness; and, so far
5    8|             to such a degree, that a wanton stimulus is necessary to
6    9|         mother, than the most artful wanton tricks could ever raise;
7    9|            be considered as only the wanton solace of men, when they
8   13|             fly for amusement to the wanton, from the unsophisticated
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