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1 1 | preserved jewelry of the women. These two classes, and
2 2 | did it seem that even the women~scarcely thanked him. The
3 2 | the type of those adorable women who exist in England,~Scotland,
4 2 | the coquetry which most women spend on a single sentiment,~
5 3 | young girls and the old women all say that he is in love
6 3 | proper part in making the~women love him," said the baron.~ ~"
7 3 | the short~hook that all women carried in the early days
8 3 | usual indulgence of the old~women of the old school, but she
9 4 | where the houris are not women. There is more wine~drunk
10 4 | which made those virtuous women blush and weep, and~spent
11 6 | one of the few celebrated women of the nineteenth~century,
12 6 | at most, twenty~famous women. Therefore, although in
13 6 | salons to eclipse other women once more~by her beauty,
14 6 | futile education~given to women, and by maternal instructions
15 6 | her as she was in~1817. Women who know the conditions
16 6 | rare in Brittany, where the women's eyes are as black~and
17 6 | lively as those of Southern women; but instead of possessing
18 6 | pronounced than in other women and~completes the character
19 6 | from her sex; there such women are found to have a certain~
20 6 | whose thighs are those of~women when they are sly, cunning,
21 6 | the limitations of other women? Has that intellectual~strength
22 6 | skin is an arm given to women by Nature to~resist the
23 6 | and the elite of Parisian women came. The parentage of~Mademoiselle
24 6 | men at an age when most women can only see one~man; she
25 6 | she despised what other women admired; she detected falsehood
26 6 | and fresh, at an age when women are~summoned by Nature to
27 6 | world. Felicite, like other women, was induced to~believe
28 6 | sanctioned her independence; women admired her mind,~men her
29 6 | nothings~so seductive to women and to poets. She understands
30 7 | in the midst of which the women of the eighteenth century
31 7 | disorder. The fancies of women are not~the action of the
32 8 | which is lacking to most women, but which, if we do possess~
33 8 | among frigid, lymphatic women,~and made that an excuse
34 8 | do wrong to tell you~that women with fat chins are exacting
35 8 | costume of the time when~women had long, pointed bodices,
36 8 | arranged some biscuits.~ ~"Fair women, blonds," said Camille, "
37 8 | dear~friend, that while women are sometimes bad, they
38 8 | will be known only to the women who love him. In his art
39 8 | chivalrous. To him, all women are madonnas. One must live
40 8 | he said~to me. 'How many women are there who would sacrifice
41 8 | suitable manner of~life for women who have placed themselves
42 8 | with the highest rank of~women; and the more attentions
43 8 | the life of an~artist. We women live by love, whereas men
44 8 | in jest to which so many women cling, and~justly; for is
45 8 | blue sky, and to~which all women like to yield themselves,
46 8 | in Florence? All loving women dread~society; but I, who
47 8 | one of those~glances of women, or of men, which would
48 8 | green foliage, in all the women, beautiful, noble, elegant,~
49 8 | Beaumarchais, she felt, as other women would have felt, that it
50 8 | for two months. The three~women, mother, aunt, and Mariotte,
51 8 | thoughtwell, that Parisian women were very fortunate to have
52 8 | Calyste, begin by loving women of a certain age?"~ ~"I
53 8 | Besides, how would old women end if it were not for such
54 8 | to make~love than younger women. An adolescent youth is
55 8 | why the hearts of young women are only understood by mature~
56 8 | maturity. Besides, such women~reveal in their smiles and
57 8 | through them.~ ~I think such women can never be forgotten by
58 8 | thousand~distractions; these women have none. No longer have
59 8 | we can choose among all women the~woman to love, and she
60 8 | try to~love only noble women, if love you must."~ ~ ~
61 9 | still; twilight, beloved of women, was spreading~through the
62 9 | perfect antithesis.~These two women could never be rivals; each
63 9 | by a sort of pride which women know how to express in~slight
64 9 | without being ridiculously so. Women of~the great world know
65 9 | proves a fatal reef~to vulgar women.~ ~The expression of Felicite'
66 9 | only by desire; that most women deceived~themselves in loving;
67 9 | sarcasm had made the two~women pensive. Calyste was conscious
68 10| profound disgust I feel for women, I would stay and help~you
69 10| do~with two extraordinary women, and you feel too much for
70 10| that eulogy yesterday on women of your age, explaining
71 10| think you the greatest of women, but if I continued to~serve
72 10| herself,a sentiment that few women are able to conceive and~
73 10| sight of the two~Parisian women, and suspected the cause
74 10| friends and the two elegant women, witty, accomplished, and~
75 11| fearing to be overheard;~for women have an amazing instinct
76 11| child; you know~nothing of women; all you know is how to
77 11| forever~above all other women in his memory, the first
78 11| it is impossible for some~women to forego it; but when that
79 11| ferreting~for the miseries of women, has saidnever lie," she
80 11| preliminaries of a duel between two women,a duel without truce, in~
81 11| Touches, and leave the two women forever.~ ~"Not go to Les
82 11| amusement. Also you will see women making fuel~with cow-dung,
83 11| savage bitterness.~ ~The two women dropped upon a bench from
84 11| those~wicked grandeurs which women only practise when driven
85 12| be the most humiliated of women, were I forced~to hide fearful
86 12| which delicate and noble women keep to themselves, of which
87 12| wretched by trifles that most women put up with;~inexorable
88 12| feeling for poor Beatrix; women of her~age are indulgent
89 12| rival.~Camille is above such women, and that remark does not
90 12| eyes, one of the~greatest women of our age. She has mind
91 12| child,~how dangerous are women with noble sentiments! There
92 12| Belle-Poule' was so famous~that women wore head-dresses '/a la/
93 13| XIII DUEL BETWEEN WOMEN~Perhaps one of the greatest
94 13| self-~approval.~ ~The two women were half-sitting, half
95 13| going on between these~two women, each hiding from the other
96 13| always a~crucial moment for women. The cleverest as well as
97 13| can~never be simulated. Women have a genius for shades,
98 13| seem~insignificant. Two women observing each other play
99 13| disappeared. The fact~was odd. Women do not usually leave a room
100 13| hitherto unknown to it. Women are not often the subject
101 13| ungrateful," continued Beatrix. "Women among themselves know each~
102 13| you~share his contempt for women. I have no reason, my dear,
103 13| and presently she wept as women weep in their bitterest~
104 13| this scene between the two women calmed~down during the night.
105 13| attractive to~the majority of women,an excellent system between
106 13| excellent system between men and women, but~fatally unsafe among
107 13| but~fatally unsafe among women alone. In the midst of this
108 14| fashion of caryatides.~These women go barefooted with very
109 14| hampered in climbing by women's clothing,~she wore trousers
110 14| of his~speech.~ ~None but women who truly love, or inborn
111 14| Cold, fragile, thin, hard women like Madame de Rochefide,
112 14| like Madame de Rochefide, women whose~necks turn in a manner
113 14| contrast~between them!~ ~Few women could resist such constant
114 14| forever~the loftiest of women in the eyes of her young
115 14| excursion to Croisic, the two women were discoursing one~evening
116 14| indeed she is the~lowest of women,then, my child, my adored
117 15| terrible glances in which~women have the art of saying all
118 15| arbiter of the fate of two~women. In short, he will fire
119 15| the conversation round to women,~and lauded the nobility
120 15| all to him in misfortune. Women had the advantage over men~
121 15| few moments later, the two women were seated under a strong~
122 15| the~rash promises which women are silly enough to accept
123 15| there are some provincial women obtuse or silly or malicious
124 15| upstairs," said the latter. "Women are so~distrustful; those
125 15| their demands just as many women sacrifice it to~religion
126 15| history is that of many women.~ ~The next morning Calyste
127 15| society. She is one of those~women who prefer the celebrity
128 16| Have you loved many women in your life?" he asked
129 17| lottery; and~that is why women weep at a wedding while
130 17| they risk nothing, while women know, or very nearly know,
131 17| it be the bride? How many women~reading this history will
132 17| young brides and to many old women. All those who find~themselves
133 17| Saint-Germain, if intelligent, are women in mind. Before marriage,~
134 17| of good manners; though women of rank, anxious to hand
135 17| Memoirs of two young~Married Women." Her letters to her mother
136 17| dare say justly, the young~women of the present day, who,
137 17| the~honeymoon of the young women of the present day?~ ~When
138 17| heard the girls and the women saying to each~other, "Oh,
139 17| times happier than young women, and then, speedily,~fifty
140 18| the desire that~nips all women to know if their power is
141 18| was /caught/,like other women who want to be caught,~and
142 18| and beautiful, as many~women have said to you that I
143 18| Ah! dear mamma, have all women to~struggle against memories
144 18| one of the most charming women in Paris, the diversions
145 18| by many unhappily married women~that she drove her terrors
146 18| augured well of by~experienced women. In October, 1839, the young
147 18| herself, on the theory of~most women in such cases. How is it
148 18| age of thirty the pretty~women of Paris ask nothing more
149 18| head, like other deserted women, to assume a~virgin air,
150 18| agreeable; and certain men adore women who play at seduction as
151 18| And that is true. Deserted women are~usually those who merely
152 18| the secret of all those women who seek to~retain you men.
153 18| from the mania of literary women! Now go, leave me; I must
154 18| nature or~the cleverness of women, which hide their anxieties
155 18| selected chance, possibly, for~women have two memories, that
156 18| hers. Eve was fair; brown women descend from~Adam, blondes
157 18| cowards in their treatment of women. Go, monsieur, go and~dine
158 19| payments.~The two young women, Ursula and Sabine, had
159 19| chances which all jealous women prepare for themselves,
160 19| should fall at~the feet of women to adore them, for such
161 19| make in order to manage women. He was therefore~compelled
162 19| before the mirror. Clever~women are never deceived about
163 20| while it rejuvenates the women of a certain age, gives~
164 20| certain age, gives~to young women a splendor of freshness,
165 20| into tears, and wept as women weep~when they are all alone.~ ~
166 20| see on~the arms of such women golden serpents with diamond
167 20| situations like that of Sabine, women~curse the pleasures of wealth;
168 20| happiness; so that all those women who have endured it may
169 20| appeared~in a toilet such as women are inspired to wear in
170 21| time of life I think you women have a~devil of your own.'"~ ~"
171 22| authorized him to despise women), allowed itself free scope
172 22| with so much point~that women without any intellects proclaimed
173 22| amorous adventures, bored by women of fashion of the~kind who
174 22| the highest class of those women whose social utility~cannot
175 22| campaign, which make the women of this class say of a~man, "
176 23| the two~handles by which women take hold of such pitchers
177 23| as common to them as to women,that of being loved~exclusively.
178 24| in that~society of young women which includes Mesdames
179 24| you know, a passion with women of that sort. Du Guenic
180 24| to know the full power of women who~are not virtuous."~ ~"
181 24| connoisseur emeritus, whom all~the women of the Madame Schontz type
182 25| masterpieces of painting and pretty women and"~ ~"And at my age what
183 25| have, don't you see, as to women a certain honor; we may~
184 25| but in France the heads of women~are principally treasured;
185 25| dressing-door closing as women's doors do close when they
186 25| cause of his success with women as his superiority in the
187 25| to~meet with one of these women who has not aspired several
188 25| deceptions. On the other hand, women restrained by their~education,
189 26| fear which~oppresses all women who have been constellations
190 26| pride, that outrage which~women secure of their rank in
191 26| was crowded by fashionable~women ranged on the stairs or
192 26| established the blockade~which women declare by frigid glances,
193 26| horrible alternatives in which women who have hitherto retained~
194 26| insensibility under which women extinguish their loves.
195 26| with one of those atrocious~women, Madame Schontz, who had
196 26| on husband and~wife. Such women, monsieur, will put out
197 26| for her revenge? Ah!~these women! You can understand now
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