Chapter
1 II | excited and happy over her lover's return.~ ~But at length,
2 II | the lost but not forgotten lover~that their spirits now could
3 II | in a manner a poet and a lover to hear all that~lies in
4 II | seemed now to say to her lover, "Yes, it is I. I am here. ~
5 II | it fell like balm~on the lover's burning heart; it blossomed
6 II | Sister Theresa?" enquired the lover. He dared not~ask any questions
7 III | nothing but duty with your lover before you? Is he never
8 III | lied~to you; this man is my lover!"~ ~The curtain fell at
9 IV | admiration. Flattery and a lover are proofs of power. And
10 V | satisfied a man's ambitions. A~lover constantly bears witness
11 VI | made up her mind to gain a lover in~Armand de Montriveau
12 VI | a trace of~shame in the lover's bashfulness, and perhaps
13 VI | not capricious, and that a lover must take her as she~was.--"
14 VI | were delighted to take a lover away from Mme~de Langeais.
15 VII | as your~friend nor your lover, you do not care for me!
16 VII | anger that~leapt out in her lover's eyes. Even as she tortured
17 VII | M. de Montriveau was no lover of hers. And as for him,
18 VII | magnetic influence of her lover's~warmth; she hesitated
19 VII | afforded~consolations to her lover, who made the most of them.~ ~
20 VII | was genuine; the unhappy lover was convinced that~she loved
21 VII | lady nor the priest. The lover~apart, Montriveau was not
22 VII | have been put out by her lover's gloomy~silence; it was
23 VII | was delivered up to her lover. Possibly she may~have feared
24 VII | successive conquest on which a lover feeds his love, that these~
25 VII | Embarrassed like a young lover who cannot~dare to believe
26 VIII| Dear angel, has a plighted lover no privilege whatsoever?"~ ~"
27 VIII| possible taste of a plighted~lover or a wedded husband to break
28 VIII| which held firm only for her lover. She~had read Armand's intention
29 VIII| Onlookers know the rejected lover by various signs and tokens;~
30 VIII| fiery, stubborn, exacting lover had never done. Her~apprehensions
31 VIII| flashed from the foiled lover's eyes, his face was~radiant
32 VIII| really frightened. Her late lover's~presence weighed upon
33 VIII| an outcry, and turn your lover out at the door as~if he
34 IX | lay~between her and her lover, and so establish that perfect
35 IX | coquetry had cost her her lover, and the~despairing tears
36 IX | for commonplace~men; her lover at the moment, the Marquis
37 IX | love,~and has not seen her lover for two months, such a swift
38 IX | and consideration for her lover's~sake, and that in the
39 IX | love. But when you take a~lover, is there any need to make
40 X | are at the mercy of your lover; it means~that you must
41 X | drawn to~these. For cannot a lover, with the voice of a great
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