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1 1 | garden, is a lamp of an odd kind. This lamp has a~common
2 2 | whole property of every kind to his~elder and only sister,
3 2 | reserved his mind, he and his kind, for~action, not dissipating
4 4 | made~reflections of that kind, the players and the visitors
5 7 | his intellect. She was so~kind to him; a woman is always
6 8 | desire for celebrity of one kind or~another. Nevertheless,
7 8 | Paris for a wrong of that kind,~and trampled him under
8 10| conflicts of passion of a kind so rare in France, and so
9 12| Therefore, dear Beatrix, be kind, be consoling to me. When
10 12| without grandeur of any kind,~a life ruined by my own
11 12| comrade, what you will of that kind; but we~have no rights other
12 13| Camille was gentle and kind; she felt herself~the superior
13 14| advantage over sights of that kind as that~accorded to the
14 14| with~the Roman Church, ever kind to repentance, poetic to
15 16| hurt~him; he was gentle and kind to his mother only. The
16 17| and a cold fool, the worst kind! I, in my legitimate~love,
17 19| dealer in bric-a-brac, the kind and feeling Calyste~understood
18 22| women of fashion of the~kind who are truly bores, and
19 22| t leave a marquis with a kind heart~like that for a /parvenu/
20 23| making himself a fate of some kind. Suspicions were also turned~
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