Chapter
1 II | confessor, blinking. "I will speak about~it."~ ~"How old is
2 II | the languages which you speak"~ ~The aged nun bent her
3 II | have dared to do only to speak to~you for a moment of your
4 IV | passion, and compounded, so~to speak, with its pleasures. Some
5 VI | How could a man~dare to speak just then to this suffering
6 VI | but it is no compliment~to speak of your beauty to you; nothing
7 VII | for her, "you~shall not speak to me of your husband. You
8 VII | understand them. Let me~simply speak to you of expediency. Would
9 VII | are too chastely tender to speak of~our happiness to anyone
10 VII | assurance of your love. You speak of my~beauty; I may lose
11 VII | seeing~that he was about to speak, "you have no heart, no
12 VIII| duel~of which she could not speak. Her proud hard nature was
13 VIII| bull, or what~not, and will speak of him quite at her ease.
14 IX | the~hardest to bear. Just speak; tell me if you wish for
15 IX | understand me? Did I not speak just now of~justice? To
16 IX | call~when you came in to speak about Antoinette. But yesterday
17 X | have a right, I think, to speak in this way~to you; for
18 X | reflections.~ ~"Since you speak of feeling, my child," he
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