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1 1 | thought to have greater virtue among those~rocks than at
2 3 | vice; it~becomes a means of virtue; its privations are a perpetual
3 5 | discreet," said his father,"a virtue of the olden~time."~ ~"Too
4 8 | bravery, they say, is the only virtue into which~hypocrisy cannot
5 12| defend you, and I call~it virtue. You are only the more beautiful
6 12| woman who makes her pride a virtue.~ ~Therefore, dear Beatrix,
7 13| I don't know what fresh virtue he has roused in me, but
8 15| afraid of her pride and her virtue. Perhaps,~in spite of my
9 15| rise in acts as high as~virtue. Read thus, this history
10 17| unjustly deny the innocence and virtue of young~girls who, like
11 19| beliefs, one's~poesy, idol, virtue, happiness, all, all in
12 19| tell me she is a pearl of virtue? I know she~thinks you handsome;
13 20| displeased him, wounded him! My virtue has made itself hateful.
14 21| precipices down which our~virtue flings us when led by love,"
15 25| life that I am capable of virtue. I can be an~honest woman
16 25| several times to a~return to virtue through love. They are not
17 25| opulence, and wearing a halo of~virtue, are drawn at times, secretly
18 25| one that faint~desire for virtue, the other that faint desire
19 26| possible to return thence to~virtue. Until this moment Madame
20 26| incomplete for vice as she is for virtue."~ ~"I don't agree with
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