Chapter
1 II | cell? ~While innumerable thoughts of this kind perplexed his
2 II | in the sea, were full of thoughts of him. Love~seldom attains
3 III | world. You have been in my thoughts at every moment~for five
4 III | to~outweigh the uncounted thoughts that have gathered in my
5 III | during the past five years, thoughts that have changed, and worn,~
6 VI | woman who was to fill~his thoughts.~ ~For these reasons the
7 VI | cavalierly treated in his thoughts of yesterday had~become
8 VI | confidence, he brought out his thoughts and views; he felt~nothing
9 VI | stir new life with noble thoughts. If the world has~grown
10 VI | pause, filled with many thoughts, before she spoke with~that
11 VI | words~flagged behind her thoughts, she appealed to the feelings. ~
12 VII | there!--there are some thoughts~like wounds, from which
13 VII | from the~licence of her thoughts. How else explain the incomprehensible~
14 VII | be frank; these are~your thoughts! Oh! you calculate, and
15 VII | filled with cruelly~painful thoughts. He was just beginning to
16 VII | but selfishness in all his~thoughts and motives, in the answers
17 VII | supreme moment~the myriad thoughts in his mind might have been
18 VIII| the shock of tumultuous~thoughts as a granite cliff stands
19 VIII| brows;~immersed in bitter thoughts in that boudoir where he
20 VIII| Mme de Langeais kept her thoughts to~herself, but is it not
21 VIII| The man's character and thoughts~seemed to pervade it. No
22 VIII| what I am. I cannot put my thoughts into words whilst~you are
23 VIII| for myself, I have no such thoughts."~ ~He flung his cigar coolly
24 VIII| the world.--I express my thoughts badly; the wounds you dealt~
25 IX | of rude poetry to their thoughts. Perhaps also this~same
26 X | can say this now; these~thoughts came to me when I played
27 X | for the two lovers. These thoughts sent~Montriveau flying from
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