Chapter
1 I | accomplished in the breast of God. No convent,~indeed, was
2 I | striven to draw closer to~God, seeking Him on mountain
3 I | everywhere man has found God. ~But nowhere, save on this
4 I | express~them; like death, God, eternity, they can only
5 II | glory~of the ever-living God, became the utterance of
6 II | between~kneeling men, and a God hidden by the blinding light
7 II | organ, a veil is woven~for God, and the brightness of His
8 II | of a jealous and avenging God. Indeed, in the~joy of the
9 II | The Amen was the return to God. The~final chord was deep,
10 II | forms~of poetry ascend to God, in whom all passion on
11 II | the~infinite glories of God; of God, whom we always
12 II | infinite glories of God; of God, whom we always represent~
13 II | her love as a sacrifice to God? Or was it~Love exultant
14 II | exultant in triumph over God? The questions were hard
15 II | her again, to~contend with God for her, to snatch her away--
16 II | in the praise sent up to~God, seemed now to say to her
17 II | faithful in~the breast of God was something solemn, something
18 II | himself, "Shall I triumph over God in her heart?" when a faint~
19 II | companion~is my mother in God, my superior here on earth."~ ~
20 III | to give yourself, even to~God. Did you not promise me
21 III | the powers of earth; if God could~come down from heaven,
22 III | do not fear the anger of God. Ah! I would far rather
23 III | a pure friendship which God~watches over! You do not
24 III | I never pray for myself: God will do~with me according
25 III | heart less sorrowful to~God."~ ~"What can I say? Dear
26 III | for you, in the~breast of God. As God is just, you shall
27 III | in the~breast of God. As God is just, you shall be happy"~ ~"
28 III | what, before him; now~it is God, it is the welfare of my
29 IV | looking for~new forces where God puts them, these petty great
30 VII | For my own~part, I fear God. M. de Langeais may have
31 VII | eloquent, plead the cause of~God better than the Duchess.
32 VII | Is it nothing to disobey God?" she asked him, recovering
33 VII | you~decline to believe in God, for it is impossible to
34 VII | its pretension to abolish~God."~ ~Theological and political
35 VII | his ears, to see whether~God might not rid her of this
36 VII | That man, monsieur; say God!"~ ~"God again! _I_ ought
37 VII | monsieur; say God!"~ ~"God again! _I_ ought to be alone
38 VII | in your heart. But leave God~alone where He is, for the
39 VII | where He is, for the love of God and me. Madame, you SHALL~
40 VII | at him. ~"I thank you in God's name."~ ~The General was
41 VII | of her husband, then of God, and then of the inevitable~
42 VII | Duchesse, I am in despair that God should have invented~no
43 VII | Marquis, I am in despair that God should not have~invented
44 VIII| yourself, and fear~nothing from God or men."~ ~"What good would
45 VIII| and my liberty."~ ~"Ah, God!" cried he, "I am a child."~ ~"
46 VIII| to~behold the Light of God. Love would be naught without
47 VIII| which I have power. I am not God. Listen~carefully to me,"
48 VIII| your sin here on earth; God may perhaps forgive you;
49 IX | struggled; but here I am!--Ah! God, he does not hear me!" she~
50 IX | the drawing-room.~ ~"Ah, God!" she cried, "to see him
51 IX | father or~mother, he holds God responsible for his hard
52 X | nothing~worse calumniated than God and the eighteenth century;
53 X | should I give myself?--to God. The eyes that you loved
54 X | face; and may~the glory of God blind them to all besides.
55 X | And now may the will of God~consume me. Between His
56 X | executioner's axe, mine is God's; yours kills, mine saves.
57 X | that lie at the feet of God,~for to them is given the
58 X | fatal~threshold.~ ~"Oh, God!" the cry broke from her
59 X | us, heard her say, `Oh, God!' so that it went to our
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