Chapter
1 II | pouring out of the church. Feeling that his behaviour and~attitude
2 II | alcalde and the governor that, feeling~suddenly faint, he had gone
3 III | cried with a quick rush of~feeling. "He was generous to me.--
4 IV | some traces of a loftier~feeling; but in the Emigration of
5 V | startled her, and, with a~feeling almost like dread, she turned
6 V | in the second place, the feeling in~the artillery was decidedly
7 V | Republican; and~the Emperor, feeling little confidence in a body
8 VI | unpardonable sin. In their feeling towards loftier natures,~
9 VI | vibration of lofty thought and~feeling. And he would very promptly
10 VI | makes women quick to read feeling. If the~Duchess showed any
11 VI | sprang~from this virginity of feeling.~ ~There are men here and
12 VI | a complete revulsion of feeling. ~And so in those who live
13 VI | so in those who live by feeling, rather than by~self-interest,
14 VI | understanding of the~delicacies of feeling, of the soul's requirements.
15 VI | he meant to say, and was feeling that he was only an instrument~
16 VIII| A conception of life as~feeling occurred to him for the
17 VIII| From me you must expect no feeling, nothing resembling~it.
18 IX | air was warm; the Duchess, feeling the heat,~opened her eyes,
19 IX | change in herself, a~new feeling that she could not shake
20 IX | would come, and enjoyed the feeling of expectation. Her~whole
21 IX | thought that~madame was not feeling well."~ ~"Yes, I am going
22 X | reflections.~ ~"Since you speak of feeling, my child," he said, "let
23 X | understood you, if you have no feeling towards me but~aversion,
24 X | me you never roused any~feeling of love in me. Do you ask
25 X | understands life through feeling, and is~adorned in all her
26 X | thrill of repressed strong~feeling, that magnificent utterance
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