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1 1 | as they do at Venice, a desire~(soon forgotten) to end
2 6 | between marriage and love, her~desire was to keep her freedom;
3 6 | thought it lay in a feminine desire to escape fame~and remain
4 6 | In spite of any such desire, if she had it, her celebrity
5 7 | the dupe of his professed~desire to go to Croisic and see
6 7 | said. "He~knows how much I desire his happiness," she went
7 8 | thought her consumed with a desire for celebrity of one kind
8 8 | genius, and Camille Maupin's desire to put him back on the~right
9 8 | glance or a smile? He~felt a desire to turn and rend that cold,
10 9 | that love existed only by desire; that most women deceived~
11 10| the little salon; a~savage desire to rush in and carry her
12 10| course, was not at all his~desire. He had no wish to see either
13 11| solitary uncomprehended desire of his~ ~soul, which was
14 12| yours only the joy of a desire the end of which is, as
15 12| be a sister to you; and I desire that this letter~may terminate
16 13| suddenly felt an inexplicable~desire to be a tyrant. But, in
17 14| imagination could invent or~desire.~ ~There even exists a thing
18 14| religious that~their inmost desire is to win its fruition through
19 15| faithfulness, and declare that we desire to pass our lives with them,~
20 15| fatal alms of a rebuke;~they desire to be talked about at any
21 17| that delicate souls might desire solitude and seek to~escape
22 17| s family, I feel a keen~desire to fly to you, to tell you
23 17| request than to his own desire to talk of that strange~
24 17| happiness. Still, I think the desire to put~Madame de Rochefide
25 18| reasoning of Mrs. Blue-Beard the desire that~nips all women to know
26 18| ashamed of~it all. A frantic desire seizes me sometimes to fly
27 18| contrasts, by a frantic desire to play~with artifice. It
28 18| cards. And this is why: The desire of the man is a syllogism~
29 18| cannot~forget; I love, and I desire to be faithful to a past
30 20| falls at~last into a fury of desire to get the better of her
31 21| that any royal race could desire for heir presumptive.~ ~
32 21| result in~great good; and I desire to know from you whether
33 22| happiness that a~Parisian can desire in being to Madame Schontz
34 22| resemble, would naturally desire to distinguish himself by~
35 23| little thing~magnified by desire until it has become the
36 25| poet,~expressed a strong desire to see this king of the
37 25| their heart a perennial desire to~recover their liberty;
38 25| hearts, the one that faint~desire for virtue, the other that
39 25| virtue, the other that faint desire for libertinism which~Jean-Jacques
40 25| is it?~Possibly only the desire to know everything.~ ~ ~
41 26| proprieties, also by that desire for concealment which characterizes~
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