Chapter
1 II | the minor, the organist told her~hearer of her present
2 II | House of Bourbon."~ ~"I told them the reason of the mass;
3 II | piece of admirable Jesuitry told of such love and regret,~
4 II | committing mortal sin. I~have told a lie. How many days of
5 V | insensible. "I am loved!" she told~herself. "He loves me!"
6 VI | sorry to allow you to go. I told myself~this morning that
7 VI | that I love her?"~ ~He had told her already a score of times;
8 VI | that this strong man had told her the truth. ~Armand had
9 VI | his life he could not have told his love~to one of his closest
10 VI | not go out tonight," she told the~footman. Her long, blue
11 VII | with the bishop-designate told him that here was the~real
12 VII | from Mme de Langeais's, he told himself~that no woman would
13 VIII| elsewhere. I could have told you of half a score of~women
14 VIII| rising in flood.~ ~"If you told me the truth yesterday,
15 VIII| am a~spoilt child, as you told me yourself. When I seriously
16 VIII| made part of a whole that~told of a life reduced to its
17 IX | my brother Ronquerolles~told me that your servants were
18 IX | will make the advance," she told herself, as she~tossed on
19 IX | longing--all these things told upon her, mind and body;
20 IX | and under seal of secrecy told her of this strange freak.~ ~
21 IX | Montriveau's father did. I told him~about it, I used to
22 X | Everything that can be told."~ ~"But, my sweetheart,
23 X | precisely what cannot be told that I~want to know. Let
24 X | different. The Duchess was told that the General would not
25 X | me sooner? I would have told you to be~punctual. Good-bye
26 X | friends were waiting, he told them that~never in his life
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