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1 4 | baroness:~ ~"I know the cause. Calyste is lost unless
2 4 | to~strike a blow for the cause, and Mademoiselle des Touchesthe
3 6 | contrary direction to the cause.~Felicite had no inclinations
4 6 | illustrious woman would of course cause rumors, some of~which, as
5 8 | fire in La Vendee! If the Cause had had twenty~thousand
6 10| women, and suspected the cause of his coldness.~ ~Charlotte
7 14| she said, "and it was the cause of~my sternness to you that
8 14| Calyste felt before he saw the cause of it. On a~bench, beneath
9 15| expected his flatteries to cause me."~ ~"What else?" said
10 16| not for the grief I~should cause my mother, I would have
11 16| Alas! whatever be the cause, Calyste is dying," said
12 18| nothing, or he /does/ know~the cause of my flight, in which case
13 18| looking at us; it~might cause trouble to your wife if
14 18| seeking to know if haply the cause is~in herself; she studies
15 18| and was watching for the cause of slight~convulsions, not
16 18| we ought to look for its cause in a vanity so deeply buried
17 19| her real illness and its~cause. As for you, Calyste, an
18 21| Portuguese, recognized a moral cause in the physically weak condition~
19 23| affectation of interest in the cause~of Poland, in penitentiaries,
20 25| wit was not so much the~cause of his success with women
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