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1 6 | Touches admires~her fortunate rival with angelic composure,
2 9 | How could he, Calyste, rival~such as an artist? What
3 11| pleasure in thus entrapping her rival in her~toils. She sent her
4 12| to triumph over a younger rival.~Camille is above such women,
5 12| there; she is your~only rival,is not this to say that
6 13| when their~eyes take in a rival from head to foot; they
7 13| my dear, not to~allow a rival to triumph over me unless
8 13| jealousy ever cast upon a rival.~ ~"On that ground, I believed
9 14| of Camille's celebrated rival, in which is the captivating~
10 15| of salutations with his~rival. He was torn by conflicting
11 15| remained~at table with his rival, begging him to keep him
12 15| sees it threatened by a~rival. He may wish to leave a
13 15| composer, begged by~his young rival to sing, gave them that
14 17| misplaced love for an unworthy rival. Yes, there I~was, in the
15 18| am taken for our odious~rival! But this is prostitution!
16 18| Utopia; better have one's rival in the past than in the
17 18| to the~dead; she fears no rival. A kiss to my dear Athenais,
18 19| where~the kisses of her rival were still warm.~ ~"What
19 20| the conclusion that~her rival probably sat surrounded
20 20| to get the better of her rival, and often~goes too far,
21 20| preparations invented by her rival.~ ~This period lasted some
22 20| the hope of~eclipsing a rival, and about which Calyste
23 23| discovered Rochefide's secret~rival. Bixiou fancied he saw the
24 23| sculptor, of being his fortune rival. This artist, a charming~
25 24| had never had any other rival in elegance, deportment,
26 25| returned the civility of his rival, and touched his hat lightly~
27 26| the window and seen his rival.~ ~"Who came?" he said to
28 26| the window, watching his rival's departure, when~Beatrix
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