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Alphabetical    [«  »]
happier 1
happiest 1
happily 5
happiness 98
happy 52
happyat 1
harass 2
Frequency    [«  »]
101 paris
100 la
99 monsieur
98 happiness
97 guenic
97 house
97 saw
Honoré de Balzac
Beatrix

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happiness

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1 2 | man would~have thought it happiness to marry her as she looked 2 2 | notes.~ ~Gasselin's greatest happiness was to cultivate the garden 3 5 | might be destroyed; the happiness of his life, so long and 4 5 | little lies to conceal his happiness.~Let him alone to amuse 5 6 | conditions of temperament and happiness in~which a woman should 6 7 | knows how much I desire his happiness," she went on, looking~attentively 7 7 | have a Calyste, oh! what happiness! I could be a humble and 8 8 | abdication,she chose personal happiness rather than~such eclipse. 9 8 | greater. Conti was wild with happiness,the~happiness of vanity 10 8 | wild with happiness,the~happiness of vanity alone. 'That's 11 8 | destined to destroy the happiness of this noble family.~As 12 8 | time, and, as you~know, happiness occupies a large part of 13 8 | Providence? do I not owe my happiness to you?~You must never doubt, 14 8 | darling; she plans for your happiness with as~much anxiety as 15 8 | course~through the azure of happiness, which the breath of pleasure~ 16 9 | pain in the midst of the~happiness he found in looking at Beatrix. 17 10| remorse; we have neither happiness to regret nor hopes~betrayed. 18 10| swept along by thoughtless happiness, like a circling bird darting~ 19 10| not knowing the greatest happiness that~there is for us poor, 20 11| know that one owes~one's happiness only to perpetual care, 21 11| of~love, in the power of happiness, in the certainty of being 22 11| young~heart the ineffaceable happiness of an absolute devotion, 23 11| all," replied Camille; "happiness ignores~everything but itself. 24 11| accessories under which we stifle happiness. I am what I have never~ 25 11| his face~glowing with the happiness of being face to face with 26 11| say my reputation, but my happiness," she said, meaningly, with 27 12| at your feet, and all my happiness consists in your~stepping 28 12| unknowingly, destroyed my happiness, and yet you owe me~nothing 29 12| that distinguish her or the happiness that she can~give you. Whatever 30 12| the irregularity of their happiness; but it is~pitiless to vice.~ ~ 31 12| a man, after ten years'~happiness, were not as respectful 32 12| from cruel disappointments. Happiness has its~insolence, and I, 33 12| what could I do for your happiness? Nothing. Do not betray~ 34 12| line of Dante on eternal happiness, which I heard her~interpreting 35 12| My name is Beatrix; the happiness of~Beatrix is my happiness; 36 12| happiness of~Beatrix is my happiness; her life is my life, and 37 12| me! Give me this day of~happiness; and that passing alms, 38 13| alternations of~joy and gloom, happiness and unhappiness, the extinction 39 14| and fresh, and tells of happiness,the happiness of~labor; 40 14| and tells of happiness,the happiness of~labor; where the verdure, 41 14| run the risk of taking a happiness I know would quickly end."~ ~" 42 14| Calyste, that you men promised happiness, and~ended by flinging us 43 14| adoration of the~youth, whose happiness cost her little, for a gesture, 44 14| that to love was the first happiness, that of being loved came~ 45 14| re-enter, and the young happiness offered to~her; between 46 14| Calyste at the summit of happiness asked~her plainly to fly 47 14| ten years I have had no~happiness comparable to that which 48 14| The~love I have had the happiness to inspire in your heart 49 14| he not doubting of his~happiness; and both deceived. Calyste, 50 15| in speaking of his past~happiness, a melancholy poem, which 51 15| make nooses to catch our happiness. We swear eternal~faithfulness, 52 15| our most~carefully planned happiness. I have seen that you love 53 15| congratulate her on~her new happiness. Well, she was furious! 54 15| of a scandal to tranquil happiness;~they fly in the face of 55 16| to be~able to make the happiness of any other woman; though 56 17| feel no remorse; the only happiness I have known in life I owe 57 17| I shall owe my eternal happiness; will you not~accept a few 58 17| or wish except for your happiness. Ah! if you only knew~the 59 17| was aware that I owed the happiness~of being his wife. He hesitated 60 17| words~made him wild with happiness. Still, I think the desire 61 17| of grief if our present happiness ever~ceased.~ ~I must tell 62 17| you about myself, for my happiness is at its heightand how 63 17| came here to kneel with~our happiness at the feet of her who gave 64 17| I~prefer not to buy that happiness by months of suffering. 65 17| enchantments of love and happiness," I~answered.~ ~"Calyste 66 17| wrong. You have easily~won happiness; you have only to stretch 67 17| inspired it. To make your happiness lasting, try,~my dear child, 68 17| it, horribly weak in my~happiness; I cannot resist a single 69 18| Les Touches? What sort of~happiness is mine if it depends on 70 18| you to find out if your happiness~rested on such a frail foundation 71 18| rode full tilt through my happiness,~like the horse in the German 72 18| morning,~"because I owe my happiness to it; and so I forgive 73 18| woman~who fears to lose her happiness and so clings fast to it, 74 18| certain fresh life to the happiness of the young~household by 75 19| faint with the weight of happiness, not for~the piece of furniture, 76 19| already well repaid by my own happiness in~doing it. I can never 77 19| one's~poesy, idol, virtue, happiness, all, all in pieces, withered, 78 19| brought~by a lifetime of after happiness. If you wish me to esteem 79 19| Beatrix," he said, "you owe me happiness. I have sacrificed my poor~ 80 19| a fool have betrayed my happiness. Sabine nearly died of it; 81 20| resting securely in her happiness. She sought for the fatal~ 82 20| reaction of luxury upon~happiness; so that all those women 83 21| dignified,~cold; measure the happiness you give by that which you 84 21| were rocks on which my happiness is wrecked. I have~ceased 85 21| am intoxicated with the happiness of~having married one of 86 22| moment the greatest amount of happiness that a~Parisian can desire 87 22| misery for the woman turns to happiness~for the man. This contrast 88 22| Calyste, such wealth was happiness enough. While his wife continued 89 22| many thorny hedges around~happiness, he had married after a 90 22| the four periods of this happiness. It is necessary to~show 91 22| meeting, the second phase of happiness~declared itself.~ ~Madame 92 22| Aurelie refused to make the happiness of a Russian prince who~ 93 25| crushed the young wife's happiness.~ ~"Don't be so troubled, 94 25| them. I shall have made the happiness~of husband /and/ wife; what 95 25| Couture at the summit of happiness, saying to La~Palferine, " 96 25| would never consent to my happiness."~ ~"You have reached an 97 25| a man who feels that his happiness is being torn from his heart~ 98 26| raising her eyes,~radiant with happiness, to her mother; "we have


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