Chapter
1 I | lighted entirely by the great stained-glass~rose-window
2 I | scores~that we owe to his great genius, the nun seemed to
3 I | Perhaps the~soul of the great musician, so gloriously
4 I | made by men~who brought great influence and unusual powers
5 II | brilliant~quivering notes some great singer might strive to find
6 II | to hear all that~lies in great music? Religion, love, and
7 II | the convent; though the great Saint, St. Theresa, often~
8 II | you could scarcely see the great black crucifix,~the portrait
9 II | for in the cloister the great saying, "Peace in the Lord,"~
10 II | delight in the midst of a great and, for him, an~entirely
11 III | that affection, love, a great love, the joy of living
12 III | precise definition. There are great houses~in the Place Royale,
13 III | youth.~ ~In every age the great nobles, and the rich who
14 III | rich who always ape the~great nobles, build their houses
15 III | reared already about the great hotel built by Louis XIV
16 III | just going to bed when~the great world is thinking of dinner;
17 III | taken as a motto by the great in all countries. These
18 III | phrase may~bring about a great revolution. Whenever the
19 III | is the splendour of its great mansions, its great~gardens,
20 III | its great mansions, its great~gardens, and a surrounding
21 III | princely~revenues drawn from great estates.~ ~And what is this
22 III | way the isolation of the great, the sharply marked~distinction
23 IV | theorem is as good as a great name. The Rothschilds, the~
24 IV | are princes de facto. A great~artist is in reality an
25 IV | weight of the masses in a great crisis. And in our days
26 IV | itself, and not at all of the~great family of the noblesse.
27 IV | the patron's place, like a great man, the~Faubourg Saint-Germain
28 IV | narrow-minded leaders of a time of~great intellectual progress all
29 IV | in the first place, the great system of English Toryism
30 IV | God puts them, these petty great folk took a~dislike to any
31 IV | lacked an adviser~equal to so great a crisis, the aristocracy
32 IV | less armed with all the great~principles which lie at
33 IV | something like disgust. The great lady of the new~school exercised
34 IV | ferment without which the great~struggles of the world could
35 IV | loyalty. Under the eyes of great relations, with the~light
36 IV | to her of showing herself~great; she is a woman in her forgiveness;
37 VI | Montriveau was one of~many great men unknown to fame, and
38 VI | enthusiasm to a project of great importance, he turned his~
39 VI | were dim and shapeless. The great~sacrifices made in his travels
40 VI | everywhere~he met with great deference and respect. He
41 VI | His social success was great,~precisely because he stood
42 VI | was something strange~and great. Women generally were so
43 VI | principal characteristic of his great, square-hewn head was the~
44 VI | as if, in the stress of a great crisis, all~these finer
45 VI | glance of her eyes. Her great lady's grace, her most~striking
46 VI | beyond cavil one of the great~inducements to the sentiment.
47 VI | never loved. It is a man's great pretension with us. ~And
48 VI | passion~in this unmistakably great man promised her amusement,
49 VI | confession, for a first and great favour. There~was a pause,
50 VI | de Talleyrand, one of~her great admirers, said, she knew
51 VI | She so little knew the~great generosity of a large nature,
52 VII | cried. "What do you mean? Great heavens! Can~you imagine
53 VII | on light occasions, as a great singer can act~with her
54 VII | long since annulled was no great~sacrifice to make to her
55 VII | like that. You have too great a nature~to take up their
56 VII | interests do not die.~. . . Eh, great Heavens! what are France
57 VII | equivalent to "Yes."~ ~"I am a great ass," he said, kissing her
58 VII | graceful~spring, "you are a great simpleton." And without
59 VII | alone in a virgin forest.~ ~"Great Heavens! what are you playing
60 VII | captivated by my wit, my grace. ~Great Heavens! you would soon
61 VII | because the said experts are great PROVERS, and love, in spite
62 VIII| last forever; love grows great through constancy. ~It was
63 VIII| reputation had grown so great in Paris~boudoirs. He was
64 VIII| your time in grafting your great nature on that~unthankful
65 VIII| wise among~mortals, while a great man at such a time possesses
66 VIII| Oh! you would do me a great pleasure by `resolving'
67 VIII| these two had~hollowed out a great gulf between them~ ~The
68 VIII| Ronquerolles's sister,~gave a great ball at the beginning of
69 VIII| cut off. I~only fear some great misfortune for you. If your
70 VIII| voice~said in her ear.~ ~So great was the Duchess's terror,
71 VIII| mother's love; a love so great indeed, that it was past
72 VIII| for a noble~bringing up, a great name, a fair woman, a duchess.
73 VIII| rose to her feet, with a great dignity and~humility in
74 IX | master, my master should be a great man. As I felt~conscious
75 IX | know that you are noble and great! Why, when a woman loves,
76 IX | out, with the~passion of a great generosity repelled with
77 IX | heart; with the man grown great by all that she had lost
78 IX | been afraid; but after a great crisis in life, fear loses~
79 IX | his friend; that his is a great nature. Pooh! society~does
80 IX | sorry to miss him. I took a great interest in him, and~promised
81 IX | his sincere friend. I like great~natures, dear friend, ridiculous
82 IX | flattery. But Armand's was a great~nature; he surely must be
83 IX | There must~be something great about a woman if she says, `
84 IX | fifty thousand livres of her great fortune, for~Napoleon had
85 IX | the representatives of the great noblesse that~determined
86 IX | in the company of~several great lords, renowned no less
87 IX | charge."~ ~"It will be a great loss for society. She was
88 IX | lately married, and has a great vogue, they~say, in that
89 IX | position. Why, he is one of the great men of the day; he is~high
90 IX | and I own that I have no great liking for~him--Langeais
91 X | serenity that comes when a great~resolution has been taken,
92 X | in the belief~that she is great in your eyes. Your harshness
93 X | and you seemed to me~so great even then that I would not
94 X | that believe~yourself so great; in humbling you with the
95 X | that she is out."~ ~"Then a great misfortune has happened,
96 X | hiding-place. After such great efforts they would not risk
97 X | lover, with the voice of a great longing,~call forth a wholly
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