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1 2 | women spend on a single sentiment,~believe me, that woman
2 5 | masterpiece made by them; this sentiment blues their sight and~supersedes
3 5 | they perceive what that~sentiment is about to take from them;
4 6 | Will she not cast aside a sentiment when~it no longer responds
5 6 | modified by delicacy of~sentiment and the softer terms of
6 7 | refusals of Felicite. This sentiment, which~was more the need
7 8 | week actual horrors of sham~sentiment, infamous buffooneries of
8 8 | age?"~ ~"I don't know any sentiment more artless or more generous,"
9 10| yourself, not~for herself,a sentiment that few women are able
10 10| without hope; it is the sentiment that brings us~nearest God.
11 11| effect produced by this~sentiment of joyful hospitality.~ ~
12 11| but the depths of such sentiment~being dark and obscured
13 12| no~other heart so deep a sentiment as they have in me.~ ~In
14 12| the baroness was to see a sentiment~attaining, by the force
15 13| herself a sharer in the sentiment, but she thought it heroism
16 13| that sudden moment,~the sentiment which is the most difficult
17 14| they know how to put into sentiment as~much of the picturesque
18 14| picturesque as the particular sentiment can bear without a~loss
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