Chap.

1    2|       curse, and that they must return to nature and equality,
2    3|       sentiment or taste.~ ~ To return from this apparent digression.
3    4|     their persons as the proper return for his exertions to support
4    8|   regaining respectability by a return to virtue, though men preserve
5    9|         when any thing beside a return in kind is sought. Yet whilst
6    9| episodical observations, let me return to the more specious slavery
7   11|        of solicitude call for a return, and the son ought, at least,
8   12|       to shift for himself, and return alone in the evening to
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