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1 2 | was about to bring home a mistress, she had~been moved to great
2 3 | absent-minded greeting of the~mistress of the house, he replied
3 3 | of his rich and miserly mistress, thus~economizing those
4 4 | description is the most dangerous~mistress a young man can have."~ ~"
5 5 | another woman! she is the mistress~of that innocent brow! Ah!
6 5 | respectable or decent~house. Its mistress leads an irregular life;
7 6 | mother; she had been her own mistress from childhood; her guardian~
8 8 | Touches; I am to bless its mistress,~at least, you said so."~ ~"
9 9 | having blundered.~ ~"Is your mistress going to Les Touches?" he
10 11 | the exquisite~grace of its mistress, brought up like a true
11 12 | letter secretly to one's mistress," he~said to the old gentleman
12 13 | tell~him that neither her mistress nor the marquise could receive
13 13 | wife, I shall not be his mistress. He has~you will laugh at
14 14 | impossible. He who despised his mistress for flinging her glove among~
15 15 | is hard to lose~fame and mistress at the same moment,' and
16 18 | satisfaction of playing mistress of a great household than
17 18 | treat me as you would a mistress. I have two remarks to make
18 19 | she is virtuous, to his mistress, unless it be to talk of~
19 19 | unless it be to talk of~his mistress, if she is beautiful, to
20 19 | wife,~nor how to tell his mistress the truth,two apprenticeships
21 20 | indirect comparisons with his mistress were not yet at an end.~
22 22 | Schontz reigned an~absolute mistress. She then began to patronize
23 22 | doubt the fidelity~of the mistress; moreover, they proclaimed
24 22 | deriving vanity from his~mistress (whom he now called Ninon
25 22 | change, who~clings to wife or mistress.~ ~We may understand the
26 26 | always there to attend his mistress. Maxime and La Palferine
27 26 | make the most delightful mistress of a salon in all Paris."~ ~
28 Add| Cousin Betty~The Imaginary Mistress~ ~Lenoncourt, Duc de~The
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