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1 2 | that pride is a necessary passion of life. Her smile was~gay.
2 4 | by that of La Bataille) a passion corresponding to that of
3 4 | upside down about~Calyste's passion for this amphibious creature,
4 5 | but a means of fortune. Passion~was an unknown thing to
5 5 | that innocent brow! Ah! passion will lead to many evils;
6 6 | himself in archaeology,a passion, or to speak more correctly,
7 6 | extraordinary, the result of a~passion for reading, sustained by
8 6 | velvet eyes. In moments of passion the eyes of~Camille Maupin
9 6 | different comedies~which passion, covetousness, and ambition
10 7 | Camille Maupin knew the passion within her as those~men
11 8 | marquise conceived the maddest~passion for him, and took him from
12 8 | woman to please him. Such a passion trenches on~the fable of
13 8 | their cleverness under a passion real or feigned, is~precisely
14 8 | only make to intensify his passion. Their devotions are~absolute;
15 10| witnessing~conflicts of passion of a kind so rare in France,
16 10| upon them by~the waves of passion. Beware!"~ ~Calyste's stupefaction
17 10| the~consequences of such a passion at your age; it would lead
18 10| between you than that. This passion of his is worth more to~
19 11| with the cowardice of true passion, that if he~were taken from
20 11| restrain the fiery ardor of his passion. But he knew not~how to
21 11| Camille, in spite of her~passion for tobacco, prefers her
22 12| hour, is a mere~wretched passion. In order to grow, love
23 12| in spite of~its immortal passion?~ ~Ask Camille how I behaved
24 12| the gulf into which his passion was hurling~Calyste.~ ~ ~
25 13| things of the heart~called /passion/.~ ~At the moment when Calyste
26 13| loved with an extraordinary passion that was free~from all vulgarity?~ ~
27 14| Calyste the symptoms of a passion such as man can feel but
28 14| man can feel but once,a~passion which dyes his soul and
29 14| that axiom to restrain his passion to the limits~of respectful
30 14| talk of the youth's blind passion; she allowed his~soft pity
31 14| These little things of passion magnify the world itself.
32 17| burden of curing Calyste's passion for Beatrix.~ ~During the
33 17| allow yourself to yield to passion and to~fancy, as I did.
34 17| to talk of that strange~passion. Do you blame me, darling
35 17| moment by a communicated passion,~but you have not inspired
36 17| dangerous as to wake a sleeping~passion."~ ~I have given you, dear
37 18| point was~to know if that passion was thoroughly extinct.
38 18| cease to galvanize that passion," he answered.~ ~What a
39 18| appearance in the world of passion.~He was now the comrade
40 18| account for Calyste's strange passion.~ ~Perhaps we ought to look
41 19| employ all the power of passion to obtain from Beatrix a~
42 19| incarnation,for at~each passion a woman becomes another
43 19| such means by a Turkish passion for Calyste's beauty,~she
44 20| consumed by a legitimate passion, who struggles thus, falls
45 21| Baronne de Macumer.~Excessive passion is unfruitful and deadly.
46 22| that time knew not what passion to devote~himself to. So
47 22| bourgeois, the strategy of~passion (except for the differences
48 22| From the very start of~his passion for Madame Schontz, Arthur
49 22| I've never had~the grand passion for Arthur that I once had
50 22| would forgive me a little passion if I fell in~love with any
51 23| school of Canalis, whose passion~for Madame Schontz was desperate;
52 24| maternity is, as~you know, a passion with women of that sort.
53 26| part the effect of a real passion.~Beatrix now experienced
54 26| experience that terrible passion~once in the course of their
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