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1 3 | looking to her fortune. From a feeling of truly Breton~pride, Jacqueline
2 6 | with angelic composure, feeling no jealousy and no~secret
3 8 | of~ideas, enthusiasm, a feeling for the beautiful, and a
4 8 | ideas, certain states of~feeling difficult to describe in
5 8 | infamous buffooneries of feeling. I will not tell you about~
6 8 | has no belief in the good feeling of~any human being. Even
7 8 | still~possess your right of feeling, while I, I have no longer
8 8 | Narcissus. Besides that feeling of repugnance, there is,~
9 9 | the contagion of a~true feeling, called Felicite's attention
10 10| were the result of wounded feeling. I intend to have an explanation~
11 10| passionate~effusions of feeling that comfort mothers, and
12 11| understand Camille's motive, but feeling that she~came to his assistance
13 12| why, then, does the weaker feeling rule the stronger? I loved~
14 12| well afford to forgive your feeling for poor Beatrix; women
15 13| of hope, the marquise~was feeling a keen delight in knowing
16 18| his hand to Beatrix and feeling~for the second time that
17 19| bric-a-brac, the kind and feeling Calyste~understood the greatness
18 26| How could I help it? Feeling is stronger than we; one
19 26| me; but~I see you've no feeling at all, not even jealousy,'
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