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1 1 | the past, the symbol of a~grand thing destroyed,a poem,
2 1 | motto, FAC. Is not that a grand and noble thing? The circlet
3 2 | ideas. But, examining~that grand old man with sustained observation,
4 6 | Calyste passed along the~Grand' Rue to the Croisic gate
5 6 | the Empire, and~behold the Grand Army when it came to the
6 7 | person who was a great and grand thing~to him before he thought
7 7 | music-lessons. To him the~grand apartments on the lower
8 8 | wishes to put his new~work, a grand opera, into rehearsal at
9 8 | than he~can forget what is grand and sublime. A young woman
10 10| adoration. The scheme was grand and ignoble both; but to~
11 10| in the long run. You are~grand, and you are sublime; bear
12 10| of noble~sentiments, of grand weaknesses, poesies, spiritual
13 11| Beatrix were leaving the grand~salon after their dinner.
14 11| Maupin, as shocking as it was grand, is one of those~wicked
15 12| sternness of twenty years. That grand and noble~Camille mingled
16 12| not fearing storms as that grand eagle feared them.~ ~But
17 12| She is a noble woman, a grand woman!" said the baroness,
18 12| Pen-Hoel~can bestow that grand result upon you in the marriage
19 13| woman. Come, put off your~grand airs, and give me your hand!"
20 15| Mademoiselle Falcon of the Grand Opera. I think of marrying~
21 17| occasion, assembled in~the grand salon of the hotel de Grandlieu
22 17| advice. You told me to be grand, noble, dignified, and self-~
23 19| child! I'd like to see that grand old~name of Guenic become
24 21| was fine and sacred and grand within me,~all my virtues,
25 22| change? I've never had~the grand passion for Arthur that
26 23| to solve. Society on its grand scale has been demolished
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