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1 8 | over you; you have your own~free will, and I have lost mine.
2 10| not so. The field will be~free to you in a few days and
3 10| All supposed~Calyste to be free of his late entanglement,
4 12| must end. Therefore I am free to love you here on~earth
5 12| own conduct. Camille is free; she can go and~come as
6 12| suffers. She will find you a free Beatrixif~it is a Beatrix
7 12| her ground in Paris would free your~property in Brittany;
8 13| reserve or too little; a free and luminous look; the~mysterious
9 13| extraordinary passion that was free~from all vulgarity?~ ~To
10 13| would I were~virtuous and free, that I might give him something
11 14| her piano to leave~Calyste free to take and press the hands
12 15| love her. I would leave her free.~True love means a choice
13 15| enough to~say: 'Here am I, free at last.' The spent ball
14 15| be~happy, and I shall be free. Seem to pity that angel
15 16| a man whose heart is not free; and thus I shall~be spared
16 16| replied Du Halga.~ ~"Was she free?"~ ~"No," exclaimed the
17 17| marry entirely of his own free will."~ ~Marriage is not
18 17| will certainly not be as free and proud as I have now
19 18| happy in being afoot, and free to go by~the Pont Louis
20 18| life to be spontaneous, free, the~dash of an impetuous
21 18| trammelled, a man absolutely free, and~you see to what that
22 21| to~enlighten me,I were to free Calyste by persuading Monsieur
23 22| despise women), allowed itself free scope in the~matter of brains.
24 25| her fortune was used to free the Baron du Guenic's estates?~
25 25| play the lover; leave me free to retire from my mud-~hole
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