Chapter
1 I | because the winds are~so high, the architect was unable
2 I | from the church except~the high altar and the officiating
3 I | stained glass beyond the high~altar.~ ~At the time of
4 II | monomania into the key of high passion; and,~furthermore,
5 II | grief. ~Then on a sudden, high notes rang out like the
6 II | his Spanish hosts in the high opinion they~had formed
7 IV | his character with that high self-respect, of which the
8 IV | And the art of words,~the high pressure machinery of the
9 IV | persons who preserved a high tradition of~courtesy, of
10 IV | semi-passion,~the ineffectual high aspirations, the actual
11 IV | aloof, and took their~place high on the sunlit summits of
12 IV | the seraphic powers in the high~sphere known as le petit
13 VI | the~beloved. Is she set so high by birth that a contemptuous
14 VI | that mourned, to encourage high virtues, to reward~artists
15 VII | was the wrath of the Most~High better justified than by
16 VII | gift of her person. The high value which you yourself~
17 VIII| might perhaps have conceived high hopes. ~Of all human passions,
18 VIII| elder branch may occupy~high places in peace and live
19 VIII| lowest unless you are set high above the rest~of the world.--
20 IX | devotion is~accompanied by high rank, as men count it. Oh,
21 IX | Armand, there~are noble, high, and chaste and pure natures
22 IX | self-love, or pride or a high spirit; for all these~forms
23 IX | gowns of an evening (so high an~opinion of her ruins
24 IX | little, and he held his head~high; to many people this would
25 IX | great men of the day; he is~high up in the Guards, and very
26 X | were always~ready for use; high waves and the caprices of
27 X | her glory only for love's high festivals.~ ~The General
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