Book, Chapter

 1    3,  92|       in which the most refined arts had perished, and among
 2    3,  92|        her own reward, the fine arts flourished, and there was
 3    3,  92|      cannot even appreciate the arts already practiced, we only
 4    4, 117|         poet sings with all his arts;~'T'is jealousy or hate
 5    5, 138|         who am skilled in these arts, can the shrubs of Mount
 6    5, 154| practice the most useful of all arts, the art of flattery; who
 7    5, 155|       life; and all the liberal arts operating for the greatest
 8    5, 155|  hunting is not one of the lost arts is apparent even in our
 9    6     |        was, the age of taste in arts and letters. Such an one
10    6     |   generosity, her taste for the arts, her attachment to her friends.
11    6     |         wonderful epoch of fine arts, belles lettres, and beautiful
12    6     |  discretion, to your persuasive arts are confided our dearest
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