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1 1 | archaeologist, observing men instead of stones, would
2 1 | paludiers/ (the name given to men~who gather salt in the salt-marshes)
3 1 | forests and sacrificing men upon their dolmens. Useless
4 1 | when a dwelling was built men worked, or~thought they
5 2 | resemblance to those choice old men whom Van Ostade, Rembrandt,~
6 2 | him joyfully. The three~men of the family were absent
7 2 | recognized the steps of the three men in the little lane leading
8 4 | their lodgings~last year to men with beards, who were suspected
9 4 | adventures"~ ~"With several men," said the rector. "And
10 5 | Baal~possessed to so charm men as to make them forgetful
11 5 | their sons into superior men, true mothers do not like~
12 6 | like Cleopatra, nor throw men into the river as the heroine
13 6 | manias which enable old men to fancy themselves still
14 6 | the supremacy of military men, to whom~society made obeisance
15 6 | her to judge soberly of men, and art, and things, and
16 6 | it has its counterpart in men, whose thighs are those
17 6 | dead~bodies of the daring men who have consulted her.~ ~
18 6 | learned and scientific men, and publicists,a society~
19 6 | that of Baron~Gerard, where men of rank mingled with men
20 6 | men of rank mingled with men of distinction of all~kinds,
21 6 | ambition make the generality of men~perform,even those who are
22 6 | her~talent. She observed men at an age when most women
23 6 | with~that contempt for men which later was to make
24 6 | women admired her mind,~men her beauty. Her conduct
25 6 | journalists, artists, and men~of the world. She knew his
26 7 | passion within her as those~men of science knew their own
27 8 | to the verge of abysses. Men~alone have the staff on
28 8 | womanly; we are too like men, we French brunettesWell,
29 8 | was all the while judging men, and~things, events, and
30 8 | one advantage over those men,he is in vocal music~what
31 8 | grandeurs~in their souls that men can never appreciate. Well,
32 8 | the heart. There are some men, like Nathan, of whom I
33 8 | externally, and yet honest.~Such men lie to themselves. Mounted
34 8 | women live by love, whereas men live by love and~action;
35 8 | otherwise they would not be men. Still, there are great~
36 8 | which to sound the~hearts of men? I have no threat at my
37 8 | glances of women, or of men, which would make me think
38 8 | in Paris of several young men of the highest~nobility
39 8 | were very fortunate to have men~of genius to adore who adore
40 8 | the discussion, "do young men~like my Calyste, begin by
41 8 | semi-dowagers, to~whom young men pay their first court, know
42 8 | only understood by mature~men, who conceal their cleverness
43 8 | Claude Vignon is handsome. Men of genius have luminous
44 9 | expectation is known to all young men. A subtle fire~flames within
45 9 | appetite. Like other young men, his nature~was in the throes
46 9 | characteristic of young men whose hearts and lives are~
47 9 | loved for reasons unknown to men and~to themselves; that
48 9 | arm, gave the other two men to~the marquise, and let
49 10| Your strength repulses men of strength who fear a struggle.
50 10| as with some few but rare men of genius, love is not~what
51 10| stood erect before the two men, subduing both with the~
52 11| observation. Happily~for us, most men know nothing about it; they
53 11| Young lovers are like hungry men; kitchen odors will not
54 11| which threaten, in~certain men, to turn into madness. He
55 12| of the mind. In all young men not tainted~by corruption
56 12| themselves, of which you~men know nothing; nor could
57 13| primitive race of~people, where men are moved by other sentiments
58 13| justificationbut that's the way of men, they are all unjust and~
59 13| excellent system between men and women, but~fatally unsafe
60 14| as far as Batz. A few old men declare that in days long
61 14| happy," said Calyste.~ ~"All men begin by promising that,"
62 14| truly, Calyste, that you men promised happiness, and~
63 14| the different ways that men~adopted to declare it; admitting
64 14| themselves that the cleverest men,~and naturally the least
65 14| violently. But love in young men is so ecstatic and religious
66 15| Women had the advantage over men~in constancy; nothing ever
67 15| really the executioner. Young men spit fire and flame; they~
68 15| her hate them. But wise men do as I am doing; they get
69 15| luckily for you, how hampered men often are in their careers
70 17| four witnesses, and the men present; the~tears were
71 17| weep at a wedding while men smile; men believe that~
72 17| wedding while men smile; men believe that~they risk nothing,
73 17| tenderness on the noblest of men whom a~foolish woman disdained
74 17| an opera chorus. The old men talked of Calyste's resemblance~
75 18| None but innocent young men~should be married to pure
76 18| the~dissipations of young men. A wife is proud to see
77 18| between two very~distinguished men, Canalis and Raoul Nathan,
78 18| makes him~sit beside her, men of the world find an immediate
79 18| dialogue, turns the heads of~men who are endowed by nature
80 18| but~agreeable; and certain men adore women who play at
81 18| women who seek to~retain you men. The dragons who guard treasures
82 18| which, perhaps, we~owe great men?~ ~It would be difficult
83 18| Beatrix. Perhaps the noblest men retain some clay in~their
84 18| side of vice.~There are men, truly noble, like Calyste,
85 18| vibrate for Beatrix. If great~men have played before our eyes
86 18| adultery, why should ordinary men be wiser in their~generation
87 18| either by her or by me.~Men are all cowards in their
88 19| burned out. Then, indeed, men should fall at~the feet
89 19| the only one of the two men of science whom Calyste
90 19| She then told the two men the lies she had invented.
91 19| Why do you play with such men? Frankly, monsieur le~baron,
92 19| system is more fruitful with men~of a conquering nature.
93 21| old. In the eyes of~some men youth is thought an inferiority.
94 21| complexion is monotonous;~some men prefer their doll's wax
95 21| one of the most charming men in France; I tell him,~naively,
96 22| unfortunately so many rich~men resemble, would naturally
97 22| after trying certain rich men as calculating as~they were
98 22| or~what harm the clever men who invent them have done?
99 22| much sense and she knew men too well not to~conceive
100 22| to patronize a few young men,~artists, men of letters,
101 22| few young men,~artists, men of letters, new-fledged
102 22| the beauty of those~young men and the complacent good-nature
103 22| that princes and rich men should set~their hearts
104 22| now, Arthur."~ ~Many rich men envied the marquis and endeavored
105 23| herself the rarity of eligible men,~when Couture presented
106 23| wits want to be thought men of~talent; men of talent
107 23| be thought men of~talent; men of talent wish to be treated
108 23| talent wish to be treated as men of genius; as for men~of
109 23| as men of genius; as for men~of genius, they are more
110 23| wits, wits to~disparage men of talent, men of talent
111 23| disparage men of talent, men of talent to disparage those
112 23| Never, in any age, have men demanded the affixing of
113 23| its character~which clever men make use of. Fabien's mind,
114 23| know how else to repay him. Men have a~natural conceit as
115 24| Bohemia, the youngest of young men, though he was now~fully
116 24| of him. Club life where men play cards with other men~
117 24| men play cards with other men~whom they do not receive
118 24| and~most capable of the men who practise them has a
119 24| He was also admired by men who knew~how difficult it
120 25| reasons for distrusting old men.~ ~"Have you debts?" said
121 25| expected nine guests, all men of the first ability, with~
122 25| the~progenitrix of honest men."~ ~ ~"It is dreadful, but
123 26| the fountains have~water; men of the world and Parisians
124 26| human justice,as if~superior men needed to have recourse
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