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1 4 | sailor~had been witty and loving and beloved. Perhaps his
2 4 | How could any woman help loving~Calyste?"~ ~"What other
3 5 | weakened,an emotion which all loving mothers feel at sight of~
4 5 | crime against nature~in loving a minor, and that she herself
5 7 | which~was more the need of loving than love itself, had not
6 8 | a villa in Florence? All loving women dread~society; but
7 8 | like my Calyste, begin by loving women of a certain age?"~ ~"
8 9 | women deceived~themselves in loving; that they loved for reasons
9 11| know is how to love. Now loving and making~one's self beloved
10 12| What merit is there in loving a young and~beautiful and
11 12| According to~Camille, it is not loving to love for a short time
12 13| healthy~and robust, and of loving our friends without coquetry;
13 13| think yourself capable of loving foolishly!" said Camille. "
14 13| and for the~very joy of loving him?"~ ~"Dear friend," said
15 13| Camille. "Ah! that is~not loving; you do not love him."~ ~"
16 14| captivating~image of a young man loving with idolatry and devotion,
17 14| and naturally the least loving, did not like to wander
18 15| guilty of such depravity as loving a man for the sake of his
19 15| is neither sincere, nor~loving, nor tender; if she were,
20 18| brought up by you, pure, loving, and beautiful, as many~
21 18| retain love know the /art/ of~loving. Now, though her Italian
22 18| It is not a question of loving a man," she was saying a
23 18| keen and delicate, a pious, loving~girl, attached singly to
24 20| to win back Calyste by loving kindness, by the virtues
25 24| Madame la duchesse, is not loving a noble woman, a Clarissaa
26 26| with a woman for no~longer loving you. It is always a bad
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