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1 2 | had~been moved to great emotion, believing that she must
2 4 | Those~were evenings of great emotion to the old blind sister.
3 4 | or gain, but not without emotion. On these sad evenings~complaints
4 4 | looked~at each other with emotion, distressed by the sadness
5 5 | caused her, as usual, an emotion that frequency~never weakened,
6 5 | frequency~never weakened,an emotion which all loving mothers
7 5 | which~betrayed her inward emotion.~ ~"My angel," said the
8 6 | surface; it shines; a violent emotion is necessary to bring the~
9 7 | he did not~see the deep emotion that seemed for a moment
10 8 | color unless some very keen emotion moves her. Her chin~is rather
11 9 | but restrained life and emotion would~not have had the glorious
12 10| grandeur made Calyste share the emotion of the~woman he had held
13 10| cried Fanny, seeing his emotion, which filled her~with horrible
14 11| presence of some violent emotion, went~up to her rather awkwardly
15 12| heart was tingling with an emotion half sweet, half painful,
16 14| her all his, and his~first emotion was that of pleasure.~ ~"
17 14| the inward working of this emotion. She saw that~Calyste would
18 14| Calyste, worn-out with emotion, fell asleep in his~arm-chair;
19 14| excursion, so filled~with emotion, had physically tired them,
20 26| caused not the faintest~emotion to the hungry Beatrix. A
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