Chapter
1 I | any one that asked, or his~heart to the first that would
2 II | this 'hidden disease of the heart'? There are fools~that love
3 II | is a woman that has no heart except for her own purposes."~ ~"
4 II | he felt the prick in his heart, poor fellow. But he was
5 II | Between ourselves, let the heart alone, it spoils the intellect.~ ~"
6 II | living,~thanks to her want of heart"~ ~"Who is this?"~ ~"The
7 II | out, you fling yourself heart and soul into the~conversation,
8 II | character~of Effie in The Heart of Midlothian."~ ~"Do you
9 III| inveterate affection, a kind of heart~complaint which has almost
10 III| knock audaciously at~your heart, like the dark-haired damsels
11 III| augured well for~things of the heart. 'Elle a duc flic-flac,'
12 IV | as a lamb; she had a soft~heart that was very readily moved;
13 IV | put drust in his vife's heart. Mein Telvine prouht me~
14 IV | in you I~should find de heart of ein Elzacien.'~ ~"(Nucingen
15 IV | business. He set himself, noble heart, to~sacrifice himself to
16 IV | brilliant beauty that throws~heart, brain, and soul into the
17 V | be complete!~There is a heart in my man's breast! Weak
18 V | strange,~and you can read her heart; as rare (dear me!) in Paris
19 VI | at the bottom~of every heart, be it a girl's heart, a
20 VI | every heart, be it a girl's heart, a provincial's, a diplomatist'
21 VI | your joy; I had not the heart to keep such a~secret to
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