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1 2 | portico and letting himself~fall into the poesy of the still
2 4 | expends during the rise and fall of consols.~ ~By a certain
3 5 | dear Calyste was certain to fall in love with her. Of course~
4 6 | fortunate enough not to~fall early into absorbing love,
5 8 | she cried, "pray don't fall in love with Beatrix from
6 8 | very weight of his~head, to fall into a debauch, and abdicate
7 8 | trellises to cling to and not fall? Shall I know nothing~of
8 9 | those two children will fall in love, and you can~marry
9 9 | curls, so arranged as to fall around her face and play
10 11| go your own~way you will fall into horrible suffering,
11 12| man to love me, I should fall~indeed. The world is indulgent
12 12| Calyste.~ ~ ~The baroness let fall the letter, without reading
13 13| outstretched wings that the~fall was dreadful.~ ~"Does anything
14 14| diminished; she shall never fall from the height~at which
15 14| said Calyste, letting fall a tear; "that word can~only
16 14| violence.~ ~He listened for her fall, intending to spring after
17 14| his Laura. Such~disasters fall on none but noble souls.
18 14| should be abandoned,~if I fall lower yet into shame and
19 15| you. The~scandal of her fall was not necessary; she did
20 18| incapable of speech,~let fall the tears that gathered
21 18| her, and in spite of her~fall, belonged to the highest
22 19| Then, indeed, men should fall at~the feet of women to
23 19| on the very day after my fall!" she~cried. "Why did you
24 26| whom~love has caused to fall from their zodiacal eminence.
25 26| left her that she did~not fall to weeping, bruised and
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