Book, Chapter

 1  Int,   2|   writings of Diderot genuine virtue and a tenderness unknown
 2    1,  13|       commenced to attempt my virtue by force. When I screamed,
 3    3,  92|      the good old times, when virtue was her own reward, the
 4    4, 116|     soldier laid siege to her virtue with the selfsame blandishments
 5    5, 139|     ardent a follower of this virtue did the priestess seem that
 6    5, 145|   prostitutes; ladies of easy virtue were ardent frequenters
 7    5, 150|       life. The women of easy virtue, living within the circle
 8    5, 154| almost incredible alliance of virtue and of fortune. The long
 9    5, 154|  Hospitality was formerly the virtue of the Romans; and every
10    6     |     consists of the sovereign virtue of abstinence in defiance
11    6     |    only example of courageous virtue displayed by the Roman women
12    6     |     call themselves lovers of virtue, whereat I have often been
13    6     |  proofs of merit, and of that virtue which old age and white
14    6     |      men call personal beauty virtue, being in reality lovers
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