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1 1 | neighborhood. It would be~difficult indeed to be irreligious
2 2 | lively and black. It is difficult to~understand why Gasselin
3 4 | problems, and~intolerably difficult to play. All preferred their /
4 6 | the attempt, always very difficult in~Paris, to create a society.
5 7 | barren quicksands very difficult to cross), it may be~more
6 8 | certain states of~feeling difficult to describe in which a woman
7 10| you play this game. It is difficult; you may lose it; you have
8 10| you prefer?"~ ~"I find it difficult to prefer any of my little
9 11| with game more wary or more~difficult to capture. You are wholly
10 11| is certainly not~a very difficult one, I do assure you," she
11 11| task. I know it will be difficult to keep~him against you;
12 13| sentiment which is the most difficult of all to hide; for real~
13 14| Breton consonants being as difficult to pronounce as to~remember.~ ~
14 18| great men?~ ~It would be difficult to find a young man more
15 23| noise there,a Norman idea, difficult to~realize, for he could
16 24| in Paris can conduct that~difficult negotiation, it is I,of
17 24| admired by men who knew~how difficult it is to live in Paris on
18 25| Beatrix?"~ ~"It will be difficult; but perseverance wins."~ ~
19 25| I admit the~conquest is difficult, but it is not impossible;
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