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1 1 | you like some~enchanting woman whom you have met in other
2 1 | churches. Can you not see~a woman walking in the morning along
3 2 | love with a charming Irish woman,~daughter of one of the
4 2 | attention! When you see a woman displaying in her~own home
5 2 | sentiment,~believe me, that woman is as noble a mother as
6 2 | knows her obligations as a~woman; in her soul, in her tenderness,
7 2 | origin of the high-born woman. The pure lips,~finely cut,
8 2 | making no inquiry. The old woman studied the causes of this
9 2 | not asleep," said the~old woman, slyly.~ ~At this moment
10 2 | also over forty, was as a woman what Gasselin was as~a man.
11 2 | in~Fanny O'Brien a young woman born to the highest rank,
12 2 | prepare it for herself; a~woman capable of accomplishing
13 3 | slightest attention that the old woman could~construe as looking
14 4 | smile played on the old woman's lips. Whenever the baron
15 4 | of hers,for the old blind woman no longer~repressed upon
16 4 | abstraction of the beautiful~Irish woman. When they reached Mademoiselle
17 4 | de Pen-Hoel. That~ungodly woman, Mademoiselle des Touches,
18 4 | replied the rector,"a woman of questionable~morals,
19 4 | seems to be a sort of circus woman who never enters a church~
20 4 | Touches. And this is the woman our dear~Calyste adores!
21 4 | Church. Moreover, this~Breton woman is not a royalist! If Calyste
22 4 | who is neither man nor~woman, who smokes like an hussar,
23 4 | a~masquerader, a theatre woman, an author whose business
24 4 | the mother. "How could any woman help loving~Calyste?"~ ~"
25 4 | were few~and short."~ ~"A woman over forty years old!" exclaimed
26 4 | heard~say in Ireland that a woman of this description is the
27 5 | that often comes to a pure woman,~she asked herself what
28 5 | she longed to meet this woman~and judge her soberly for
29 5 | flowing, belong to another woman! she is the mistress~of
30 5 | be forever ruined by this woman.~ ~The next day Calyste
31 5 | alliance a signal honor."~ ~"A woman who takes a man's name,Camille
32 5 | well be my~mother; that a woman of forty committed a sort
33 5 | Fanny, "nothing can excuse a woman for~not conducting herself
34 5 | gentle tenets of her sex. A~woman commits a sin in even going
35 5 | understand," said the~old woman, turning toward him.~ ~ ~"
36 5 | the baroness. "Ah! this woman is fated to~destroy your
37 5 | baroness. "I could not~curse a woman who truly loved my Calyste."~ ~
38 5 | placid home.~ ~"I fear that woman will ruin him," she said,
39 5 | If it had been any other woman" began the baroness.~ ~"
40 5 | But, my dear Fanny, if the woman were a saint she would not
41 5 | against that illustrious woman.~ ~ ~
42 6 | herself by what right an old woman exercised so~absolute an
43 6 | an immoral combination of woman and philosopher who violated
44 6 | masculine pseudonym of a woman of genius, so~Camille Maupin
45 6 | hidden a charming~young woman, very well-born, a Breton,
46 6 | age, had married a~young woman to whom he left the management
47 6 | her uncle's wife, a young woman given over to the social~
48 6 | sentiments in the heart of a woman, however~superior she may
49 6 | coquettish, gay, volatile,a woman, in short. But she~expected
50 6 | abdication~by which a married woman begins that life; she keenly
51 6 | and happiness in~which a woman should live to resist the
52 6 | which are seldom~united in a woman. The circle round the eyes
53 6 | which separates nearly every woman of~genius from her sex;
54 6 | to belong to a colossal woman. The arms are~vigorously
55 6 | Cleopatra, that dark~little woman who almost changed the face
56 6 | wish that she~were wholly woman. He fears to find the strange
57 6 | point to~passions in such a woman? Does she judge, and not
58 6 | tender nothings by which a woman occupies, and soothes and~
59 6 | fears to find in such a woman something~unattainable,
60 6 | unpossessable, unconquerable. The woman of strong mind~should remain
61 6 | 1817 this charming young woman opened her house to artists,
62 6 | mind and faculties of~a woman and prevents her from judging
63 6 | soberly.~ ~Ordinarily a woman feels, enjoys, and judges,
64 6 | nothing in her but a mere woman. It was some time before
65 6 | thought that are natural to a woman.~He also roused in her a
66 6 | position of this strange woman; it~recognized and sanctioned
67 6 | Touches is charming~as a woman of the world,languid when
68 6 | led as happy a life~as a woman strong enough to protect
69 6 | life of this illustrious woman would of course cause rumors,
70 7 | fascinating~trivialities of a woman's existence encumber it;
71 7 | before he thought of her as a woman, and it had survived the~
72 7 | She was so~kind to him; a woman is always adorable to a
73 7 | you see are the tears a woman likes to shed. We have a
74 7 | weak, I say, 'I would be a woman like your mother, Calyste.'
75 7 | But alas! dear~child, a woman cannot stand alone in society
76 7 | that. I will be an honest woman before~all else. I will
77 8 | You may believe a poor woman who~has allowed herself
78 8 | nothing~more dangerous for a woman. If she follows them, they
79 8 | great lady sets up about a woman in Paris. You'll know~what
80 8 | will see her, as a mature woman, what the rest of us~saw
81 8 | reveals~at sudden moments the woman of high birth. Without being
82 8 | by Mieris, in~which was a woman robed in white satin, standing
83 8 | difficult to describe in which a woman sometimes finds~herself,
84 8 | sometimes finds~herself, that woman is lost. The marquise conceived
85 8 | to me. She thought me a woman who was likely to~defend
86 8 | She came to see me. That woman, proud~as she is, was so
87 8 | and she kept her~place as woman and as marquise in my eyes.
88 8 | will and testament like a woman on the verge of old~age,
89 8 | herself to me as the only woman who will comprehend her.
90 8 | badge of honor for a beloved woman."~ ~"Enough!" said Felicite.~ ~"
91 8 | used for a~blind by this woman. The situation was a novel
92 8 | mademoiselle," replied the woman.~ ~Fanny, uneasy at the
93 8 | great~disadvantages for a woman in the position in which
94 8 | have all the~graces of a woman who loves, a woman who can
95 8 | of a woman who loves, a woman who can give or refuse her~
96 8 | some pleasure to have a woman with~you who understands
97 8 | Shall I know nothing~of woman but conjugal submission;
98 8 | Alas!~there is but one such woman in Guerande, and it is you,
99 8 | knowing how~indispensable a woman makes herself by such compliance.
100 8 | him /quand meme/."~ ~"Poor woman!" said Camille.~ ~Calyste'
101 8 | about him. The~beautiful woman in the fanciful dress described
102 8 | youth is too like a young woman~himself for a young woman
103 8 | woman~himself for a young woman to please him. Such a passion
104 8 | as that~which renders a woman of a certain age more adroit
105 8 | and the~vanities of the woman are flattered by his suit.
106 8 | fruits? The autumn of a woman's~life offers many that
107 8 | grand and sublime. A young woman has a thousand~distractions;
108 8 | choose among all women the~woman to love, and she must be
109 9 | of the boats was a young woman in a straw bonnet with a
110 9 | that he should love that woman. Why? In the burning desert
111 9 | its strength on the first woman that presented~herself.
112 9 | here, though," replied the woman, pointing to the~proofs
113 9 | carry~off the prize from a woman of forty."~ ~Here the old
114 9 | all Nature glorious, and woman~radiant. Are they not then
115 9 | I have never seen any woman so~beautiful as you, except
116 9 | Calyste, "how far such a woman is from me! Will she ever~
117 9 | such as an artist? What woman could ever cease to adore
118 10 | portals of that hell of woman, the lock of which is the
119 10 | cried Camille. "Am I not a woman? Do you think me~an anomaly?"~ ~"
120 10 | We will see!" said the woman, stung to the quick.~ ~"
121 10 | share the emotion of the~woman he had held so high, and
122 10 | but I will love you as no woman~will!"~ ~It was the cry
123 10 | the moans of that noble woman, so beloved, so~desired
124 10 | her," said the old blind woman to Mariotte, who was clearing
125 10 | finer to the eyes than a~woman poised on a rock like a
126 10 | the type of a~provincial woman. Tall, hard, withered, full
127 10 | was of no consequence in a woman forty-seven years of age.~ ~"
128 10 | company of that reprobate~woman!"~ ~"Oh, aunt, a woman who
129 10 | reprobate~woman!"~ ~"Oh, aunt, a woman who is the glory of Brittany!"~ ~"
130 11 | carelessly at the piano, like a woman so sure of her~friend and
131 11 | to leave him with another woman.~She played variations,
132 11 | vibrates in the heart of every woman~when she finds herself beloved.
133 11 | herself beloved. The love a woman inspires in any man's~heart
134 11 | whereas I know more than one~woman of thirty who is obliged
135 11 | what~about those of the woman, hey? The man did not observe
136 11 | describe them; and what woman would have dared to reveal
137 11 | God," said the celebrated woman. "God~is the Unknown. I
138 11 | dramas, gave~place to the woman, and she burst into tears.
139 11 | touching heroine truly, a woman~of forty! Ah! my poor Camille,
140 11 | on Camille's arm like a woman wearied out with some inward~
141 12 | beautiful and wise and noble woman. Alas! I have no merit!
142 12 | rise to the height of~the woman who makes her pride a virtue.~ ~
143 12 | You fling yourself on a woman's dress without mercy,"
144 12 | her want of power which no woman~could twice forgive. Even
145 12 | is! Calyste, that is the woman your wife should be, and
146 12 | experience,in short, I am a woman too young~to be anything
147 12 | almost irreconcilable in woman; she is generous and~simple,
148 12 | into it.~ ~"She is a noble woman, a grand woman!" said the
149 12 | is a noble woman, a grand woman!" said the baroness, with~
150 12 | her. I did not know that a~woman could abandon her husband
151 12 | other. I~took her for a woman until I saw you. You have
152 12 | there is~nothing of the woman about her, whereas in you
153 12 | I wish I could see that woman," she sighed.~ ~"Mamma,"
154 13 | Beatrix disturbed her. No woman gains an~advantage over
155 13 | to the eyes of another~woman. Too much reserve or too
156 13 | Rochefide is a very handsome woman," said the old~maid.~ ~"
157 13 | portrait of that heroic~woman, with certain gestures,
158 13 | from all vulgarity?~ ~To a woman like Beatrix this thought
159 13 | suffering. If you are not a woman in~love, you are one in
160 13 | in vengeance. It takes a /woman/ of genius to~discover the
161 13 | sensitive spot of all in another woman's delicacy. I~am talking
162 13 | abused your advantages as a woman against~me. I have done
163 13 | happened. However~little of a woman you may think me, I am woman
164 13 | woman you may think me, I am woman enough, my dear, not to~
165 13 | great nor~so small; I am a woman, and very much of a woman.
166 13 | woman, and very much of a woman. Come, put off your~grand
167 14 | for the less clothing a woman~wears, the more nobly modest
168 14 | in~thought. What could a woman like herself do with old
169 14 | thinking,~she felt the earthly woman die within her, and the
170 14 | within her, and the true woman, the~noble and angelic being,
171 14 | could never see the real woman that was in~Beatrix.~ ~And
172 14 | beautiful green eyes of the sick~woman turned to him, expressing
173 14 | and for all his life, a woman placed in the~same false
174 14 | assurance that~unless a woman were a monster she must
175 14 | all time have placed the~Woman. She relished with delight
176 14 | certainly have touched any other woman. She finally brought him
177 14 | spiritual~side. But the woman who is firmest in words
178 14 | ground of her hardness. A woman is always~over-excited when
179 14 | tears shed by~that class of woman, Calyste was filled with
180 14 | your~perfections. No other woman can have merit in my eyes;
181 14 | lightly jesting tone of~a woman who loves, together with
182 14 | its gorse. Never did any woman stand on~a finer scene to
183 15 | violent trembling of the woman~betraying how she sufferedfor
184 15 | still gives to a man over a woman. Beatrix could not~refuse
185 15 | their sentiments. Many a woman, he said,~who might have
186 15 | fixed in his heart, and no woman can ever drive me out of~
187 15 | and flame; they~leave a woman with noise and fury; they
188 15 | which leaves regret in the~woman's heart and also a sense
189 15 | He may wish to leave a woman, but he will never willingly
190 15 | extremity, both the~man and the woman strive for priority of action,
191 15 | no better way to drive a woman to betray you. You will
192 15 | ever to~conceive of. The woman of the world obeyed the
193 16 | the happiness of any other woman; though I know that from~
194 16 | You cannot~long love a woman like that, who, they say,
195 16 | since I have~looked at any woman with attentionexcept your
196 16 | Demands were made upon the old woman for wood, father and son
197 16 | the color of wax. The old woman~dropped her knitting, fumbled
198 16 | vigorous that the other old woman imitated her friend, and
199 16 | des Touches is a saintly woman; I am her surety for~that.
200 16 | out of it," cried the old woman passionately. "She has killed
201 17 | attention~which no other woman could possibly have obtained
202 17 | and to~fancy, as I did. Woman is the equal of man only
203 17 | Heed this confession of a woman to whom fame has been like
204 17 | conversion of this~celebrated woman was attributed, became,
205 17 | Grandlieu as~interesting a young woman as the heroine of the "Memoirs
206 17 | consideration which sanctifies a woman in the bosom of her~family.
207 17 | in the drama of a young woman learning, officially, as
208 17 | showed at the bad~taste of a woman foolish enough not to love
209 17 | noblest of men whom a~foolish woman disdained for a fiddler,
210 17 | disdained for a fiddler,for that woman evidently~was a fool, and
211 17 | whole married life, a happy woman, in these rooms; may~the
212 17 | you is the science of~a woman's life. Between usury and
213 17 | theory, the more I am a woman the more I make~myself his
214 17 | married to the~most beautiful woman in Paris, retains a sadness
215 18 | saved the soul of that noble woman, and made the fortune~of
216 18 | me sometimes for another woman."~ ~The loyal Breton blushed,
217 18 | my love for Calyste. That woman has appeared to me to trouble~
218 18 | this moment I am happy as a woman~who fears to lose her happiness
219 18 | seriously affected her as a woman, she was only the more poetic~
220 18 | called that of the Deserted Woman. Deserted~by Conti, she
221 18 | little fool!"~ ~As soon as a woman whispers in the ear of a
222 18 | says, without words: "A~woman who can, as it were, create
223 18 | what might be called, in woman's rhetoric,~an antithesis
224 18 | yet he~bounded toward a woman unworthy of him, when a
225 18 | imperfect human being is the woman, in spite of her faults
226 18 | Saviour's part toward the woman~taken in adultery, why should
227 18 | was rather~severe for a woman accustomed to every luxury.
228 18 | child," she said, "that's a woman who fulfils all the~promises
229 18 | Calyste! is that~the sort of woman you needed? She has fine
230 18 | Spain and Portugal. Can any woman be~tender with bones like
231 18 | a Northern or a Southern~woman would have fallen at his
232 19 | explained it. The true love of a woman invariably begins by explaining~
233 19 | reached the stage~at which a woman recognizes so delicate a
234 19 | But you wrote on a woman's note-paper; it had a perfume
235 19 | however innocent, from~the woman who loves us"~ ~"Well, don'
236 19 | that letter paper! Another woman's head had lain there, whose
237 19 | moment the~experience of a woman of my age. I know how Sabine
238 19 | for you, Calyste, an old woman like me understands your~
239 19 | young viscountess, a~happy woman, and the old /accoucheur/,
240 19 | incarnation,for at~each passion a woman becomes another being and
241 19 | against a splendid~young woman, to carry away from her
242 20 | PASCAL'S POINT OF VIEW~When a woman returns to ordinary life
243 20 | longer~present the poor young woman burst into tears, and wept
244 20 | torture there is for a young woman of twenty-three in~finding
245 20 | and smiling~like a happy woman. In the midst of her remorse
246 20 | what restrained fury does a woman fling herself upon~the red-hot
247 20 | matters of toilet, in which a woman~loses her self-respect and
248 20 | hungry, that is all."~ ~A woman consumed by a legitimate
249 21 | THE WICKEDNESS OF A GOOD WOMAN~Playing for these terrible
250 21 | passionate, as an honest woman may be, but I ought to be~
251 21 | our vice. And I, a noble~woman, must teach myself impurity
252 21 | wrong," replied Sabine. "A woman's vengeance should be worthy
253 21 | loved~the child of that woman more than mineOh! that's
254 21 | white as that of an old woman, chilled by~priestly austerities,
255 21 | mysticism."~ ~"Poor young woman!" said the abbe, maliciously. "
256 21 | the duty of a Christian woman is to withdraw a sinning~
257 21 | is to withdraw a sinning~woman from an evil path, rather
258 21 | her along it; but when a~woman has advanced upon that path
259 22 | turns to misery for the woman turns to happiness~for the
260 22 | inspire more than one young woman with~the determination to
261 22 | social jeers only touched the~woman. A member of all clubs,
262 22 | the~rue de Provence, the woman has an income, her budget
263 22 | happy in meeting with a woman of~noble nature. But he
264 22 | Barnheim of Baden, a well-bred woman. Besides, Aurelie was so
265 22 | talents like a well-bred woman; she never mentioned~them.
266 22 | husband when she is an honest woman.' And thereupon she showed
267 22 | practically his wife, his woman of business, she justified
268 22 | moreover, they proclaimed her a woman who was~eminently intelligent.
269 22 | Schontz as the most~agreeable woman to be found in the borderland
270 23 | another sort of~love. A woman like Madame Schontz, who
271 24 | duchesse, is not loving a noble woman, a Clarissaa great~effort,
272 25 | No, it is only to make a woman love you within a fortnight."~ ~"
273 25 | impossible; but if it concerns a woman, and a well-~bred one who
274 25 | promises nothing.~ ~"This poor woman must have done you some
275 25 | toilet which that sort of woman has the art of making.~She
276 25 | her~celebrity as a pretty woman to the brilliancy and freshness
277 25 | virtue. I can be an~honest woman and a loyal wife; and I
278 25 | my little man."~ ~"With a woman like you I can do it blind,"
279 25 | frigid as that class of woman knows how to make herself.~ ~"
280 25 | la Baudraye, a charming woman, a friend of Lousteau.~Arthur
281 25 | only twenty-six! And what a woman! I may say she is my~pupil.
282 25 | After a lease of six years a woman has a right~to do so. Now,
283 25 | in love with a~virtuous woman."~ ~Some ten days after
284 25 | love. These two natures of woman, so opposed to~each other,
285 26 | this day (the day when a woman is bored by~a lover) Beatrix
286 26 | has~fascinated the good woman with my million and the
287 26 | regarded herself as~a virtuous woman in heart, upon whom two
288 26 | situation necessary~for the woman to whom I do the honor to
289 26 | taste to be angry with a woman for no~longer loving you.
290 26 | baron, that that unworthy woman has~given her hand to the
291 26 | princely splendor. When a~woman so noble, the victim of
292 26 | supremely~displeasing to me as a woman."~ ~"And so end our noblest
293 26 | profound political capacity, a~woman without heart and without
294 26 | remorse. In short, that woman~is as incomplete for vice
295 Add| Magic Skin~Another Study of Woman~A Start in Life~The Unconscious
296 Add| Brides~Another Study of Woman~The Gondreville Mystery~
297 Add| Mirouet~Another Study of Woman~ ~Rochefide, Marquis Arthur
298 Add| Establishment~Another Study of Woman~A Daughter of Eve~Honorine~
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