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1 Note| human nature.~ ~In "The Great Man of the Provinces in
2 1 | angles, animated by that great~thought of Art, which in
3 1 | garden, designed by some great~architect. This rich, coy
4 1 | du~Guaisnic is one of the great barons of France, a man
5 1 | Connetable /par~excellence/, the great du Guesclin who drove the
6 1 | done by an artist~of the great Venetian school of the thirteenth
7 1 | placed at the corner of a great gable wall in~which there
8 1 | architects, careless of the great~Catholic thought, give four
9 2 | heir, the sole hope of the great name of the du Guenics.~ ~
10 2 | mistress, she had~been moved to great emotion, believing that
11 2 | relaxed except for some great occasion, such as the~lying-in
12 3 | removed her stool to the great hall~for the purpose of
13 3 | of the baroness and the great joy of all~Bretons) Mademoiselle
14 4 | Those~were evenings of great emotion to the old blind
15 4 | having Mistigris was so great to the rectoras it was~to
16 4 | The harm may not be as great as they say it is. I will~
17 5 | white brow~bore the signs of great fatigue, caused, to an observer'
18 5 | her sisters, married~to great wealth, took enough interest
19 5 | instinctively the effect of the~great emancipation that comes
20 6 | literary revolution when the great question of the classics
21 6 | the fact that she plays a~great part in the literary history
22 6 | influence over Calyste was great, no one, we think, will
23 6 | world, where she produced~so great a sensation that no one
24 6 | two operas which have had~great success, though the public
25 6 | its death at Waterloo.~The great and noble soul of Felicite
26 6 | des Touches enjoyed this great~privilege as they study
27 6 | this~problem belong to the great question of races? to hitherto
28 6 | the anger~or the irony of great minds. The immobility of
29 6 | regrets the~presence of so great a mind in such a body, and
30 6 | to Paris with Conti, the great musician, for whom she~wrote
31 6 | contemplate herself after her great disaster. She wrote to~Paris
32 7 | dining-room comprises four great buffets, also of mahogany,~
33 7 | paints Felicite.~ ~Every great soul, entering that room,
34 7 | savage harmonies are for~great spirits and great sorrows
35 7 | are for~great spirits and great sorrows only.~ ~This desert
36 7 | feet of a person who was a great and grand thing~to him before
37 7 | unused heart. In short, the~great Nineteenth Century appeared
38 7 | am no more loved by that great brain than I was by~the
39 7 | the carpet. The~pain of great minds has something grandiose
40 7 | marshes."~ ~Calyste arranged a great Gothic chair for her near
41 8 | little minds as~well as for great loves. Rochefide, being
42 8 | barriers that~the life of a great lady sets up about a woman
43 8 | days,~Gennaro Conti, the great composer, a man of Neapolitan
44 8 | any rate he recalls that~great singer to those who knew
45 8 | to the end. Conti, like a great many~artists, is dainty
46 8 | perspicacious of all~societies, the great world of Paris, ignorant
47 8 | small things as well~as great things, he is sometimes
48 8 | Vignon thinks himself a great politician as well as a
49 8 | politician as well as a great~writer; but this unpublished
50 8 | my~petty vanity to that great and noble thing,the life
51 8 | be men. Still, there are great~disadvantages for a woman
52 8 | yet see where that dear great~genius may fail.~ ~Dear
53 8 | will~and their intellect, a great career. I can do what the
54 8 | were still at table. The great critic was~something of
55 8 | delightful evening.~Genius is a great, a sublime thing! Why didn'
56 9 | ridiculously so. Women of~the great world know how to succeed
57 9 | look. From that moment the great critic~expanded into gaiety
58 10 | satisfaction of which~she attaches great and passing joys, which
59 10 | young fellow started at a great pace, until Gasselin asked
60 10 | was there justified by her great fortune~and her early successes
61 10 | Mademoiselle de~Pen-Hoel's great satisfaction.~ ~"What an
62 10 | and her daughter, to the great astonishment of the inhabitants
63 11 | your affection for me is great and so rare that~it makes
64 11 | was enchanted to find the great writer a victim to~the pettiness
65 12 | Chevalier du Halga into the great salon, from which he sent
66 12 | uniting in one person two great glories.~ ~You, Calyste,
67 12 | to leave your children a great name, and a~fine estate."~ ~"
68 13 | obtain is that of deceiving a great soul, and laying snares~
69 13 | think of me. I am neither so great nor~so small; I am a woman,
70 13 | Touches had listened to that great Voice whose~ ~counsels subdue
71 14 | compare them with~other great spectacles of primeval Nature.
72 14 | little covers sheltered by great portals; roughly~carved,
73 14 | the cup of fame which all great talents, too eager to~sip
74 14 | image of the infinite.~No great spirit can face the infinite,
75 14 | arose in her~place. Her great mind, her knowledge, her
76 14 | against the will of that~great ocean. There, Calyste, you
77 14 | nothing of love. The fault was great, and bitter is my punishment."~ ~
78 14 | a finer scene to make a great avowal.~ ~"But," she continued, "
79 15 | nor that of~Beatrix. The great artist was capable of treachery
80 15 | they turned aside into the great salon, where they~could
81 15 | love her, you'll do me a great service; I want her to turn~
82 15 | weep no more; and that's a great advantage lost."~ ~Calyste
83 16 | dined there, became the great topic of the~town; it was
84 17 | movement and life of~the great city. He found some resemblance
85 17 | Switzerland and~Germany, and the great families of France and England
86 17 | the marriage~ceremony? The great people shut themselves in
87 17 | married, dear mamma, with a great sorrow in his heart. We~
88 17 | Guerande, in~1839, to the great joy of Zephirine du Guenic.
89 18 | Calyste's; and isn't it a great~catastrophe when the eye
90 18 | of playing mistress of a great household than for~that
91 18 | winter amusements of the~great city, gave a certain fresh
92 18 | she became, naturally, a great artist in dress, in coquetry,~
93 18 | place publicly.~ ~The former great poet of the faubourg Saint-Germain,
94 18 | what that consists,~namely: great cleverness, some taste,
95 18 | to which, perhaps, we~owe great men?~ ~It would be difficult
96 18 | vibrate for Beatrix. If great~men have played before our
97 18 | Rochefide, like nearly all great ladies who break their~chain,
98 18 | formerly belonging to a~great seigneur, standing on the
99 19 | speeches of his idol, whose~great object was to amuse him,
100 19 | tell~you that he lost a great deal of money at cards,
101 19 | success of which depended on great rapidity of execution. Calyste~
102 20 | You~told me nothing of the great Calyste either; but then,
103 20 | finding herself alone in the great dining-room of an old mansion,~
104 21 | and Calyste; and she took great pains to draw~her daughter
105 21 | one which must result in~great good; and I desire to know
106 21 | means, my dear abbe, to do a great good; to~withdraw Madame
107 21 | apparently have to spend a great deal of~money."~ ~"You will
108 21 | daughter, I should do one great good by~another almost as
109 21 | good by~another almost as great"~ ~The vicar looked at the
110 22 | or~moderate-income man, great seigneur or bourgeois, the
111 22 | too well not to~conceive great hopes from such a beginning.
112 22 | handsomer, but you are a great deal older~than Rochefide;
113 22 | and given to Grindot, that great~decorative architect, with
114 22 | strove to make themselves a great reputation~by accomplishing
115 22 | Navarre could enter into one~great solemn competition, it would
116 22 | rule in favor of~certain great names of the aristocracy.~ ~"
117 23 | and had~recognized the great vice of the social replastering
118 23 | political life, the~three great divisions of the social /
119 23 | Madame Schontz, who plays the great lady, and whose~intrinsic
120 24 | comprehensive~glances by which such great scamps compromise their
121 24 | noble woman, a Clarissaa great~effort, faith! Love is to
122 24 | As for me,~I weep at the great scene of Arnolphe. Now,
123 25 | a~sort of prelude to the great one. He seemed to be engaged
124 25 | just passing him.~ ~Find a great man without some weakness!~ ~
125 25 | nowhere but in Paris by~these great female spendthrifts, for
126 25 | yeux/ and for help in a great affair. You must leave~Arthur;
127 25 | dearest?"~ ~"Go and find your great scarecrow of a wife!"~ ~"
128 25 | record a new effect of that great law of~contraries, which
129 26 | to the hungry Beatrix. A great love is a credit opened
130 26 | knock the chairs about. That great fool of a Fabien, to~whom,
131 26 | the rails along which the great social~train rolls on.~ ~
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