Chapter
1 I | might be, never was human passion~more vehemently excited
2 I | musician who brings most human passion into his art.~ ~Some day
3 I | years, in~which the pent-up passion, chafing in an empty life,
4 II | monomania into the key of high passion; and,~furthermore, let the
5 II | ascend to God, in whom all passion on earth finds its~end.
6 II | as an~outpouring of the passion that still consumed her.
7 II | to the world, the fire of passion burned as~fiercely as in
8 II | how~tears, and prayer, and passion, and loneliness had wasted
9 III | if there is any worldly passion in~your face, or if you
10 IV | substance, is~as much a dominant passion as thrift in the Dutch.
11 IV | hypocritical as a rule in her passion, and compounded, so~to speak,
12 IV | explosions,~coolly judging the passion and ferment without which
13 IV | Nothing was feigned. The passion or semi-passion,~the ineffectual
14 V | subtle distinctions of modern passion, not with comment on~the
15 V | periodical fits of craving, a~passion for engouement and sham
16 VI | opened out by early ripened passion, he~catches glimpses of
17 VI | touch his~interests, while passion brings a complete revulsion
18 VI | secret in his eyes; and the passion~in this unmistakably great
19 VII | Armand, you are flying into a passion!"~ ~"I flying into a passion?"~ ~"
20 VII | passion!"~ ~"I flying into a passion?"~ ~"Yes. You think that
21 VII | the thwarted forces that passion had given him,~upon her
22 VII | had her nec plus ultra of passion; and when once it was~reached,
23 VII | hold on a man whose ardent~passion gave her emotions unknown
24 VII | vibrates~with the throb of passion, may take up a musical theme,
25 VII | the~slighter demands of passion, only to cheat love at the
26 VII | the cause of an~unfailing passion in some of you; other men
27 VIII| that knows no diminution of passion to the~end; even so it is
28 VIII| happiness, Montriveau~understood passion.~ ~"We belong to each other
29 VIII| capitulated--then, perhaps, passion may enter among the steel~
30 VIII| power of intuition~which passion will develop at moments
31 IX | she cried out, with the~passion of a great generosity repelled
32 IX | most women, was to pass. Passion~she knew, but she did not
33 IX | love as yet.~ ~Love and passion are two different conditions
34 IX | the unclouded heaven. ~But Passion is the foreshadowing of
35 IX | suffering souls aspire. Passion is a hope that may be~cheated.
36 IX | hope that may be~cheated. Passion means both suffering and
37 IX | suffering and transition. Passion~dies out when hope is dead.
38 IX | by two~questions--"Is it passion? Is it love?" So, since
39 IX | was beneath the yoke of~passion as yet; and as she knew
40 IX | the terrible scourging of passion, while~passion is yet happy,
41 IX | scourging of passion, while~passion is yet happy, and the disenchantment
42 IX | during the paroxysms of early passion in youth they~had experience
43 IX | says, `I will have but~one passion.' "~ ~"But what is to become
44 IX | big~man with an incredible passion for oysters."~ ~"However
45 IX | let us put~ourselves in a passion, my dear niece; a man does
46 X | her~child. There was more passion in M. de Jaucourt's little
47 X | myself~without the impulse of passion? Perhaps it is the highest
48 X | confessed--all the love and the passion and the madness~ ~"I will
49 X | be said that his frenzied passion awoke to the same ardour~
50 X | and the violence of the passion~awakened in either soul
51 X | smitten with a~romantic passion for the East, wished to
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