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1 1 | doughty walls, its moats are full~of water, its battlements
2 1 | ravishing; the hedges~are full of flowers, honeysuckles,
3 1 | the~name of du Guaisnic, full of Breton significances (
4 1 | forget a precious detail, full of naivete, which will be
5 2 | watching his country in the~full light of the sun from the
6 2 | cannot be~understood to its full extent by the right of the
7 4 | play, if the basket were full, involved an inward struggle,~
8 5 | Her mind measured to its full~extent the evils which the
9 5 | Except for the black eyes, full of energy and the heat of
10 6 | of form. The forehead~is full, broad, and swelling about
11 6 | chin is firm and rather~full; but it expresses resolution
12 6 | essentially Catholic, archaic, and full of prejudice, the singular~
13 7 | boudoir; the bookshelves are full, but the fascinating~trivialities
14 7 | literature~which produced their full effect upon his unused heart.
15 8 | and sets her beauties in full relief. Nature has given
16 8 | She looks best when seen full face; the profile has an
17 8 | so nobly developed, the full and undulating outline,
18 8 | flesh-tones, and to set in full~relief the exuberance of
19 9 | FIRST MEETING~What young man full of abounding but restrained
20 9 | heart swelled, his brain~was full, a fever possessed him.
21 9 | like those haloed saints, full of faith,~hope, ardor, purity?~ ~
22 9 | feebleness of womanhood in full development, a perfect antithesis.~
23 9 | Calyste a look that was full of~flattery.~ ~By artificial
24 10| created it,an ideal kingdom, full of noble~sentiments, of
25 10| above Saint-Nazaire, was~full, and, much to the astonishment
26 10| woman. Tall, hard, withered, full of pretensions, which did~
27 10| ear with a~kiss that was full of friendship.~ ~"Quite
28 11| able now to understand the full merit~of that sacrifice."~ ~"
29 11| but twenty-eight, in the full magnificence~of your beauty.
30 11| assuredly with her mind full~of the beautiful Calyste.~ ~"
31 11| to Guerande, his soul was full~of Beatrix; he paid no heed
32 12| and I am old; her~heart is full of treasures, mine is empty;
33 12| I, on the other hand, am full of doubts; I should~drag
34 12| You, who are young and full of delicacy, how can you
35 12| day follow us. Ireland is full of~castles; my mother's
36 14| who made a respectful~bow, full of gratitude, to the baroness.~ ~"
37 14| and yet so profound, so full of mystery to anxious,~restless
38 15| safe. Listen now to~the full truth. Madame de Rochefide
39 16| her petticoat which was full of gold coins.~ ~Mademoiselle
40 18| a horrible thought rode full tilt through my happiness,~
41 18| when she has allowed him full liberty of action.~ ~One
42 21| man, very self-willed and full of~the worst qualities,
43 23| before her eyes except in full dress, varnished boots,
44 23| that if I could find a man full of ambition, who knew how
45 24| too virtuous to know the full power of women who~are not
46 25| that of Creoles, to a face full of~spirited details, the
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