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1 6 | laziness, his utter~penury, his indifference and disgust for all things,
2 7 | imagination, his~cowardly indifference, and the envy which consumes
3 8 | was charitably assuming indifference to his~unfaithfulness. I
4 8 | let~us leave him. I pushed indifference so far as to receive them
5 8 | outer man with Diogenic~indifference. Satisfied to penetrate
6 10| herself insulted by such indifference.~ ~Camille and the marquise
7 11| once to Conti, a symptom of indifference which had~not escaped the
8 12| in despair at Calyste's indifference, was~paying attention to
9 13| of all to hide; for real~indifference has something so radically
10 13| either stiffness or pretended indifference on the~part of Beatrix;
11 16| minds mistook~the lethargic indifference of the hapless youth for
12 17| concealed within his soul an~indifference to all things, of which
13 17| relays that lead rapidly to indifference and possibly to contempt.~"
14 17| would soon have drifted into indifference. What sort of~future might
15 18| marriage.~ ~Calyste, with easy indifference, was quite willing to let
16 20| the heart which is called indifference.~But all Sabine's courage
17 21| must borrow the~wisdom of indifference."~ ~"Silly girl," whispered
18 22| follows the reason for such~indifference.~ ~After various amorous
19 22| either from~lassitude, indifference, or philosophy, a man unable
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