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1 1 | thousand~memories in the minds of painters, artists, thinkers
2 2 | things which occupied the minds~of other persons. He drew
3 2 | masters were greater in their minds than their own,/were/ their
4 6 | anger~or the irony of great minds. The immobility of the human
5 6 | one of the most~original minds of our age. He, too, wrote
6 6 | understood. Some~delicate minds have thought it lay in a
7 7 | carpet. The~pain of great minds has something grandiose
8 8 | are perilous for little minds as~well as for great loves.
9 8 | about her distinguished minds; her debauches will~be in
10 8 | revolution of July, in the minds of some persons purely political,~
11 8 | allowing for the difference of minds) as that~which renders a
12 10| explanation~with her soon. Two minds as clear-sighted as hers
13 13| greatest enjoyments that small minds or inferior~minds can obtain
14 13| small minds or inferior~minds can obtain is that of deceiving
15 13| proud and noble their own minds are, and, let us~frankly
16 13| Both argued with their own minds and returned~to those treacherously
17 14| seem nonsense to common~minds, but which, to noble souls,
18 14| mystery to anxious,~restless minds that they can burrow there
19 14| it to the grace of their minds; they know how to put into
20 16| home together. Their simple minds mistook~the lethargic indifference
21 16| could it ever enter the minds of these good~people that
22 17| by the~training of their minds, by the habit of noble bearing,
23 22| witty sayings upon ordinary minds, or~what harm the clever
24 22| Rochefide, like all little minds, was terribly afraid of~
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