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1 1 | sleeping-~draught upon the body. It is silent as Venice.
2 2 | morning like a garment. Her body was~encased in the /casaquin/
3 6 | upon the chastity of the body, would have amazed philosophers~
4 6 | of a certain~lassitude of body. She saw that a change would
5 6 | whiteness which reveals that the body, so round,~so firm, so well
6 6 | so great a mind in such a body, and could wish that she~
7 6 | to~believe that beauty of body was that of soul. She fell
8 9 | large sleeves,~a pointed body and no belt, shoes with
9 10| chastely~made with a chemisette body and a pleated collar, was
10 11| existence even of his own~body.~ ~One morning he resolved
11 14| and then the thud of~a body falling on the ground. Instead
12 14| lowered the weight of her body upon the~bush.~ ~Mademoiselle
13 17| convent), have been in a body to pay their~respects to
14 17| austerities which mortified~the body only. It is, in truth, the
15 19| horrible sufferings in my body.~Happily, the baby is weaned;
16 20| permissible to apply to the body a word~which Italy has discovered
17 21| she is herself in soul and body. You'll see!~she will exact
18 23| swarming of~maggots in the dead body? All these societies are
19 25| often keep an ill-~formed body unobserved.~ ~"My dear child,"
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