Chapter
1 II | those giant~harmonies, the better he realises that nothing
2 III | to me now. I love you far better than I~ever loved you before.
3 IV | reinstate themselves, the better to~found a strong oligarchy,
4 IV | France a tardy success is no better than a fiasco. So far,~moreover,
5 IV | to appear, not even her better qualities.~ ~Not one among
6 V | object of general curiosity, better deserved attention than
7 VI | never was a man's exterior a better exponent of~his character;
8 VI | world, I see; I like you the~better for it."~ ~And even as she
9 VI | and personality to make better terms~for themselves with
10 VII | plead the cause of~God better than the Duchess. Never
11 VII | the wrath of the Most~High better justified than by her voice.
12 VII | did, she must succumb; and better death than~criminal happiness.~ ~"
13 VII | power, stating her case better than the Abbe had done,~
14 VII | to you when you know it better than I. Come! let us~stay
15 VII | you~at every moment, the better to keep your love, might
16 VIII| when they might be much better~employed elsewhere. I could
17 VIII| of them a thousand times~better worth your while than that
18 VIII| your eyes."~ ~Never woman better understood the art of putting
19 VIII| glimpse of happy life the better to feel the emptiness of
20 VIII| tamed a passive victim, the~better to gnaw his heart out; you
21 IX | destinies before her, and a~better meaning in the things of
22 IX | from Mme de Langeais and a better reception from Mme~de Serizy;
23 IX | Antoinette might have made a better choice."~ ~"The Montriveaus
24 IX | you sure?"~ ~"I know it better than this Montriveau's father
25 IX | words, on which you had better meditate: A woman~ought
26 X | higglers that leave a woman to better~themselves elsewhere! Just
27 X | would be a hundred times better to go to~Montriveau's at
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