Chapter
1 I | no small events for the heart; the heart~exaggerates everything;
2 I | events for the heart; the heart~exaggerates everything;
3 I | exaggerates everything; the heart weighs the fall of a~fourteen-year-old
4 I | drama that ever set a man's heart beating~opened out widely
5 I | evidently stirred this nun's~heart to the depths. She was a
6 I | aroused in the~General's heart became all but a certainty
7 II | years; put~a woman, put a heart, put love in the place of
8 II | ardent temper, with a~lion's heart and a leonine head and mane,
9 II | volcanic eruption, filling his heart with fire, he only~knew
10 II | became the utterance of a heart almost~terrified by its
11 II | one more~thought, how her heart was slowly reduced to ashes.
12 II | or a sore and~stricken heart, may expand as memories
13 II | musician must needs have the heart of a poet, must not the~
14 II | could not mistake--in~this heart, dead to the world, the
15 II | was still loved! ~In her heart love had grown in loneliness,
16 II | overcame a strong man's~heart? Had she so fully realised
17 II | like a whirlpool in his~heart, when that well-known voice
18 II | balm~on the lover's burning heart; it blossomed upon the air--
19 II | triumph over God in her heart?" when a faint~rustling
20 III | heaviest throbbings of my heart in vain under~many a dark
21 III | weighed heavier with your heart~than love. But do not think
22 III | that have gathered in my heart~during the past five years,
23 III | I ought to have given a heart less sorrowful to~God."~ ~"
24 III | joy of living in~another heart that is ours, utterly and
25 III | you. My life is in your heart, not~through the selfish
26 III | all things else in your heart? In time past you~put social
27 IV | consequence is a nobleness of heart in harmony with the noble~
28 IV | his intelligence. A stout heart was enough in the~days of
29 IV | peace to plant itself in the heart of~the nation. It sinned
30 IV | gifted~with more brain than heart; she was supremely a woman,
31 IV | humble in the depths of her heart, in spite~of her charming
32 IV | religion, and had it~not at heart, though she was prepared
33 IV | sweet-natured, not so much old at heart~as aged by the maxims of
34 IV | pre-eminently proud, a cold heart, a~profound submissiveness
35 V | surface, as it were, of her heart. Yet when she returned~home,
36 VI | obstacles, in reaching the heart of the~continent, when he
37 VI | to~move the coldest man's heart?~ ~This, therefore, was
38 VI | the first stirrings of a heart~unknown as yet in its suppressed
39 VI | idea into his head when~his heart has never been touched before,
40 VI | opportunity of losing his heart? But you~love to deceive
41 VI | gain an entrance into her heart. ~Montriveau should overleap
42 VI | to feel~pleasure as his heart is full of love, such a
43 VI | smile that made Armand's heart give a sudden leap.~ ~"I
44 VI | complaints were met went to her heart. She~sought a quarrel, and
45 VI | I sleep and wake in your~heart. And now today, for no reason,
46 VI | me liberty to bestow my~heart; but law and custom leave
47 VII | profound irony of a wounded heart~in his words and tone. "
48 VII | to be careful."~ ~In her heart of hearts she was delighted
49 VII | confirm the gift of the heart that you have~already given
50 VII | longer capable of carrying a heart and~brain at such variance
51 VII | can open the bottom of my heart~to you; you will see only
52 VII | ought to be alone in your heart. But leave God~alone where
53 VII | that no man had touched her heart, or~her conduct would be
54 VII | about to speak, "you have no heart, no soul, no~delicacy. I
55 VII | devotion in her composition, no heart~even, than be taken by everybody
56 VII | confirm the gift of her heart save by~adding the gift
57 VII | inmost self and your whole~heart, as you tell me, what can
58 VII | confirm the gift of his~heart than by the manifestation
59 VII | Our persistent coldness of heart is the cause of an~unfailing
60 VII | read the riddle of man's heart."~
61 VIII| possible space of sky; his heart had grown in him; he would
62 VIII| through her~intellect, her heart lies in her brain, she is
63 VIII| Do NOT try~to move her heart, nor her soul, but the woman'
64 VIII| as suffering develops a heart in women of~that sort, so
65 VIII| yielding; when a shrivelled heart has learned to expand and~
66 VIII| doubts are~fermenting in my heart."~ ~"DOUBTS? Fie!--Oh, fie
67 VIII| a something stir in your heart? For I, that am not a woman,~
68 VIII| the mere sight of~whom her heart must needs begin to beat.
69 VIII| Duchess's~nonchalance, and his heart swelled with the storm like
70 VIII| time, it may be, in a man's heart, revenge and love~were blended
71 VIII| despaired of reaching her heart.~ ~He inclined to think
72 VIII| steel; we shall see which~heart will leave the deeper mark."~ ~
73 VIII| some life still in your heart; or so I like to believe.
74 VIII| wait with a fast-beating heart and eyes~fixed in a stare.
75 VIII| the~better to gnaw his heart out; you lured him with
76 VIII| wonderful how~you found the heart to do it! Such villainies
77 VIII| indifferently at the torture of a heart as you broke it. That~will
78 IX | complain? I~gave you my heart; that was not enough; you
79 IX | simply as my~hands and my heart. One of them is a surgeon"~ ~"
80 IX | with the throbbings of her heart. He~said some word, and
81 IX | reading the depths of Armand's~heart, was all eyes; and Armand,
82 IX | this outpouring of your~heart. Good-bye. I feel that there
83 IX | thing~to wear tonight on my heart," she said, taking possession
84 IX | throbbing pulses of this woman's~heart so suddenly invaded by Love.
85 IX | whom she loved with all her~heart; with the man grown great
86 IX | close a clinging of the heart, and an~exchange of happiness
87 IX | return, she felt glad at heart to~say to herself, "I love
88 IX | heart-throbs, a day~when the heart squanders the very forces
89 IX | how~many imaginings the heart can condense into one thought.
90 IX | upon herself! To have her~heart stretched on the rack before
91 IX | necessity to the fancies of your~heart; they will have no recognised
92 X | women of those times, my heart, were quite as~remarkable
93 X | would~have ensnared his heart. All this that I have said
94 X | person would have snared his heart; my aunt is right; a man~
95 X | by the~dull rage in her heart. She reached the Boulevard
96 X | and that instinct of the heart, which is~sometimes true,
97 X | unaccountable workings of the heart! The nun, wasted by~yearning
98 X | the unseen love that his heart~knows, is an angel who understands
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