Chapter
1 I | for the resurrection of~a lost love, to find her only to
2 I | only to know that she was lost, to catch~a mysterious glimpse
3 II | together, as if to tell the lost but not forgotten lover~
4 III | through you it will be lost forever. I shall~make away
5 III | so soon as that power is lost. The~Faubourg Saint-Germain
6 VI | Parisian's grimaces were lost upon M. de Montriveau; his
7 VI | de Montriveau; and he was lost in admiration of the~Duchess
8 VII | reached, she grew angry if he lost the mastery of himself and~
9 VII | the battle~of Dreux was lost, `Very well; now we will
10 VII | you won in fact, while you lost in~right. Political Protestantism
11 VII | sublime melody, some song lost to the world.~ ~The General
12 VIII| What would life be if I~had lost your love? If I wished to
13 IX | dispute over words, I am lost."~ ~"Yes. You came to me
14 IX | great by all that she had lost in~stature? The giant had
15 IX | regained the height that he had lost for~a while, and she exaggerated
16 IX | imagination, avenging the time lost for nature, took a~delight
17 X | hundred women of quality were~lost; but for every one, the
18 X | easy-chair, and for a while she~lost consciousness. When she
19 X | de la Valliere wept for lost happiness and~vanished power;
20 X | eight she had gone. I have lost her, and I love her. Oh!
21 X | defects of~execution are lost; the pure spirit of art
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