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1 2 | one who,~like other fine souls, would far have preferred
2 5 | as so dangerous for young souls by the rectorwould have
3 5 | thing to these Catholic souls, these old people~exclusively
4 7 | extends still further. Such souls share the privileges of
5 8 | hidden grandeurs~in their souls that men can never appreciate.
6 8 | angel, I am like those pious souls who argue with their God,~
7 8 | to be seen,lighted to our souls by love, as it is by its
8 9 | first fires of imagination,~souls like his have been known
9 10| Your power~may please young souls, like that of Calyste, which
10 11| Venetian inquisitors; their souls clashed in that rapid glance,
11 11| Idea of Beauty which our souls associate with moral grandeur?
12 12| are one of the angelic souls whose mate it seems~impossible
13 12| her. And these two noble souls, so simple, so~guileless,
14 13| sands~of the shore. Their souls were as deeply agitated
15 13| of this tumult of their~souls Mademoiselle des Touches
16 14| minds, but which, to noble souls, do sometimes open vast
17 14| to the feline~race, have souls of the same pale tint as
18 14| disasters fall on none but noble souls. But, if I should be abandoned,~
19 15| developed at that moment in~the souls of all present.~ ~"You did
20 16| of hermits and solitary souls, or the~ardor of contest
21 17| would think that delicate souls might desire solitude and
22 18| only to look within our souls to see the two shared in
23 20| only to angelic~or solitary souls whom the wing of the bad
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