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1 1 | its position and the naive grace of its environs will please
2 1 | untrodden, with all the grace of~a bunch of violets or
3 1 | the building, the spirit, grace, and candor of the old~and
4 6 | fibrils,~which give them grace and strength,two qualities
5 6 | frankness, freedom, and grace, epigrammatic, and~intense,
6 7 | dear treasure of beauty and grace that nothing should ever~
7 8 | on, "Beatrix has not the grace of~her color; her lines
8 11| together with the exquisite~grace of its mistress, brought
9 11| of love. What faith! what grace! what~innocence! The ancients
10 11| necessarily a~combination of grace and strength? What is it
11 12| grandeur of your glance, the grace of your bearing, the~distinction
12 12| answer for my temper; my~grace and charm are all external.
13 14| effects; they owe~it to the grace of their minds; they know
14 16| to give him a few days' grace. The old~baron rubbed his
15 17| windows are gates and the cows grace peacefully on the grass~
16 19| appetite. He admired the grace with which his angel~ate
17 25| said, with the~particular grace of a true scamp.~ ~"There'
18 26| showed a superiority of grace, good taste,~and cleverness
19 26| written to his mother that grace has enlightened me; and
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