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1 3 | thought to be maliciously clever, but in fact she~was not
2 8 | conceit and vanity as a clever man,~which gives him a mean
3 8 | nostrils; very shrewd and~clever, but supercilious. She has
4 15| which was somewhat too clever to be~true. I think he hoped
5 18| effect, to which is added clever dialogue, turns the heads
6 19| lies she had invented. The clever~physician sitting at the
7 19| herself before the mirror. Clever~women are never deceived
8 22| one of her rivals far less clever than herself,~belongs to
9 22| writers, poor but dishonest, clever~but deeply in debt; after
10 22| minds, or~what harm the clever men who invent them have
11 22| advice. She let him take~the clever sayings she said about most
12 22| him with witty sayings and clever~opinions on all sorts of
13 23| has its character~which clever men make use of. Fabien'
14 23| Fabien's mind, though not clever, was~wholly bent on making
15 23| plan of consorting with clever celebrities and so~reflecting
16 25| reaction, easy to~foresee in so clever a mind, and he applied a
17 25| well-~bred one who is also clever"~ ~"She is a very illustrious
18 25| had better not leave that~clever creature time for reflection.
19 25| And I, whom you call so clever, I advised you to give back
20 25| the~young, handsome, and clever Charles-Edouard, Comte Rusticoli
21 26| In Paris, a man~called clever must have spontaneous brilliancy,
22 26| general are in that way very~clever. But Calyste loved too deeply,
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