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1 4 | myself for it, but I did not think it~would come so soon. I
2 5 | did not know you, I should think you were out of your~head."~ ~"
3 5 | the baroness, "I~didn't think it necessary to publish
4 6 | Calyste was great, no one, we think, will regret being~made
5 7 | He only wants to~make me think he loves me better than
6 7 | same things.' I who do not think~myself weak, I say, 'I would
7 8 | Mounted on their stilts, they think they~are on their feet,
8 8 | obey~him; though I did not think I should have to see the
9 8 | liberty of heart, which I think precious to exercise in
10 8 | men, which would make me think of murder~or suicide. Yes,
11 8 | the time of Henri III., I think,~rode his horse at the Provost
12 8 | Well, what did you think of it?" asked Mademoiselle
13 8 | eh?"~ ~"Can you really think so?" said Camille, haughtily.~ ~"
14 8 | repugnance, there is,~as I think, a mutual sense of inexperience
15 8 | known only through them.~ ~I think such women can never be
16 9 | and less studied than we think. The false situation in
17 10| the hand. "You~love; you think you are disdained; but it
18 10| Am I not a woman? Do you think me~an anomaly?"~ ~"Possibly,"
19 10| angry with~you, my dear; I think you the greatest of women,
20 10| side of~genius; besides, I think I have not said much as
21 10| viscountess, "you will, I think, be very~uncomfortable in
22 11| appease their~hunger; they think too much of what is coming
23 12| divined them all that I~think myself worthy of your notice.
24 12| indeed, by you.~ ~Do not think me one of those common lovers
25 12| with which to reason~when I think of you; blood gushes from
26 12| disdain, you~will make me think you fear me. Ah, Beatrix,
27 12| give you. Whatever you may think, she is young and I am old;
28 12| duties of~motherhood. Ah! I think her very fortunate, my Camille!
29 12| Oh, Beatrix, you do not think it so!~The love of noble
30 13| Calyste, you are loved, I think; but you are hiding something
31 13| on his behalf, and~would think them prompted by the genius
32 13| feels sentiments."~ ~"You think yourself capable of loving
33 13| little of a woman you may think me, I am woman enough, my
34 13| Calyste tries to make you think of me. I am neither so great
35 14| You have property here, I think,~mademoiselle."~ ~"Mademoiselle
36 14| manner. Calyste had reason to think himself beloved. But when,~
37 15| too clever to be~true. I think he hoped to worm out of
38 15| asked Camille.~ ~"Ah! you think you triumph!" cried Beatrix.~ ~
39 15| Falcon of the Grand Opera. I think of marrying~her; yes, I
40 15| Calyste, unable even to~think, much less to choose a course,
41 16| Halga, whom she now began~to think ill-mannered, depraved,
42 16| Pen-Hoel. "When you begin to think of your young~days you forget
43 16| both~father and son. Do you think I don't hear death in Calyste'
44 17| of strangers.~One would think that delicate souls might
45 17| and hate my husband.~ ~Now think of a man beloved so completely,
46 17| we should be years~hence. Think always that you have a friend
47 17| almost/, you to me.~ ~I think she has guessed the heroism
48 17| can't know~anything, I think, about sincere and simple
49 17| with happiness. Still, I think the desire to put~Madame
50 17| children accept things, they~think it their right; he is an
51 17| tears are in my eyes as I think of it. And my noble Calyste!
52 17| she also gave me much to think of; and all the~more because,
53 18| go to Les~Touches, and I think you are right."~ ~Oh! you
54 18| that hateful Beatrix,just think of it!~that cold, unhealthy
55 18| for the last five months I think only of myself,~that is,
56 18| knowing what her family would think of her marriage.~ ~Calyste,
57 18| How is it possible, they think, not to be~wholly the mother
58 18| his apartments~made him think of the sort of mediocrity
59 19| rather stiff."~ ~"I did not think of sending you word till
60 19| before that~treasure, I shall think, like the Roman matron,
61 19| of madness.~ ~"Ursula, I think I am going to die," she
62 19| as she ended, "do you not think with me, that in~order to
63 19| any one having a right to~think it wrong or read him a lesson.
64 19| had resolved to make him think himself unpleasant, ugly,
65 20| delirious joy if she~could think he did not go to the rue
66 21| movements are, how~handsome I think him; but to please him I
67 21| whispered Clotilde, "let him think you will avenge~yourself"~ ~"
68 21| at your time of life I think you women have a~devil of
69 24| wife for Beatrix; and~you think it is an easy matter to
70 24| his~handkerchiefs. People think that Othello, or his younger
71 25| cried Maxime. "Do you think I'm a man to~propose mere
72 25| said Maxime to Fabien, "I think you must know my friend~
73 25| in every wayand~does she think to bargain with me? With
74 25| indirectly made to me, do not think~there was the slightest
75 26| said La Palferine. "I think she will~make the most delightful
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