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1 2 | flower of the home; she knows her obligations as a~woman;
2 6 | writings. All the world now knows the two volumes of plays,~
3 7 | really does," she said. "He~knows how much I desire his happiness,"
4 8 | would tear him to bits. He~knows his weakness, and cultivates
5 8 | in a day or two. He now knows that I~know him, and he
6 8 | himself at all~ambitions; he knows what he can do; he has instinctively
7 8 | faith which is, though she knows it not, unshakable. She
8 8 | which no one in Guerande knows anything at all. She could
9 9 | mid-day breakfast. Heaven knows with what agility the young~
10 12| have gone with you, Heaven knows where, far~from the world!
11 16| Calyste's disposition,~as he knows very well."~ ~The chevalier
12 18| agrees to take me. Either he~knows life so little that he guesses
13 18| and idleness,~which Paris knows better than all other capitals
14 18| ne sais quoi/. Everybody knows in what that consists,~namely:
15 18| quiver of its~muscles, she knows whence comes its calmness,
16 20| Madame la baronne."~ ~Who knows what torture there is for
17 21| it is ridiculous that~he knows nothing of Europe. I can
18 22| hence the~saying.TR.~ ~Who knows the power in France of witty
19 25| frigid as that class of woman knows how to make herself.~ ~"
20 25| skeletons.~Your Beatrix knows how to dress herself, that'
21 26| which ends, as every one knows, with one~of the finest
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