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1 2 | century. He~had faiths, sentiments, inborn so to speak, which
2 4 | business it is to feign~sentiments, a creature who will deceive
3 6 | one of the imperishable sentiments in the heart of a woman,
4 8 | further leads him to play at sentiments which are far~indeed from
5 8 | the utmost indulgence for~sentiments."~ ~"My dear Calyste," said
6 9 | often subject ourselves to sentiments by our~own volition,deliberately
7 9 | was likely to consider sentiments only, and all his sentiments,
8 9 | sentiments only, and all his sentiments, all~his thought now belonged
9 10| ideal kingdom, full of noble~sentiments, of grand weaknesses, poesies,
10 11| share, the marquise,~whose sentiments could be noble and generous,
11 12| This tumultuous poem of sentiments which had arisen like a
12 12| manner ceased to~express the sentiments of which you complain. A
13 12| dangerous are women with noble sentiments! There is less to fear~in
14 13| where men are moved by other sentiments than those of ordinary~mortals.
15 13| ideas where the heart feels sentiments."~ ~"You think yourself
16 15| vanities. Love based on petty sentiments is always pitiless. I~have
17 15| lauded the nobility of their sentiments. Many a woman, he said,~
18 17| was~animated by the same sentiments. After this declaration
19 26| much absorbed in his~own sentiments to perceive the change in
20 26| throughout. As for my own~sentiments, I am, above all, desirous
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