Numb.
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Page
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77.
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The learned seldom despised but when they deserve contempt
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129
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78.
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The power of novelty. Mortality too familiar to raise apprehensions
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136
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79.
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A suspicious man justly suspected
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142
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80.
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Variety necessary to happiness; a winter scene
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147
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81.
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The great rule of action. Debts of justice to be distinguished from debts of charity
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152
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82.
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The virtuoso's account of his rarities
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157
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83.
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The virtuoso's curiosity justified
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163
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84.
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A young lady's impatience of controul
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169
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85.
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The mischiefs of total idleness
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176
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86.
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The danger of succeeding a great author: an introduction to a criticism on Milton's versification
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182
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87.
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The reasons why advice is generally ineffectual
|
189
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88.
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A criticism on Milton's versification. Elisions dangerous in English poetry
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194
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89.
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The luxury of vain imagination
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200
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90.
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The pauses in English poetry adjusted
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206
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91.
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The conduct of Patronage; an allegory
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212
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92.
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The accommodation of sound to the sense, often chimerical
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218
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93.
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The prejudices and caprices of criticism
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227
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94.
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An inquiry how far Milton has accommodated the sound to the sense
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232
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95.
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The history of Pertinax the sceptick
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240
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96.
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Truth, Falsehood, and Fiction; an allegory
|
246
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97.
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Advice to unmarried ladies
|
252
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98.
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The necessity of cultivating politeness
|
259
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99.
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The pleasures of private friendship. The necessity of similar dispositions
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265
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100.
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Modish pleasures
|
270
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101.
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A proper audience necessary to a wit
|
275
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102.
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The voyage of life
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281
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103.
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The prevalence of curiosity. The character of Nugaculus
|
287
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104.
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The original of flattery. The meanness of venal praise
|
293
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105.
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The universal register; a dream.
|
299
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