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1 6 | salon, partly from her own~wit, the correctness of her
2 7 | which revealed to him French wit and the qualities of the~
3 8 | and Felicite sparkled~with wit and happy sayings; they
4 10| gave her the reputation of wit, endeavoring to humiliate~
5 10| this journey made between Wit and Beauty."~ ~"You flatter
6 10| laughing. "I assure you~that my wit is but a small matter, not
7 13| OEdipus; I know you have the wit and~beauty of a sphinx,
8 14| her diplomacy, "love has a wit of~its own, wiser than that
9 15| vanity. Her fortune and her wit had not given her the feminine
10 21| setting myself up for a wit by caustic~and envious criticism
11 22| the sallies of others, the wit of the stage~and the /petits
12 22| by three /blagues/ the wit of those ladies, said to
13 22| some time with her lively wit, "that princes and rich
14 22| her education, and her wit. He had~merged his own defects,
15 23| wished to be accepted as a~wit, had formed a plan of consorting
16 23| the Heir the butt of her wit, her~jests, and her disdain,
17 24| elegance, deportment, and~wit than the illustrious de
18 25| financial eye, Bixiou's wit, Finot's shrewdness, Maxime'
19 25| hinted that La Palferine's wit was not so much the~cause
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