Chapter
1 I | apprentice.~ ~"Isn't it a love of a press?"~ ~A wedding
2 I | reflection.~ ~Avarice, like love, has the gift of second
3 I | Royalists on the other. And Love,~moreover, had come to David'
4 I | ambition lay in his passionate love~for his wife, the last survivor
5 I | marriage, like all children of love, inherited the~mother's
6 I | and meditative natures can love. The et nunc et~semper et
7 I | him to draw nearer to his love by sharing her hopes and
8 I | light of an all-absorbing love~that burned in them, which
9 I | faces, and eyes full of love, eyes so blue that~they
10 I | obey at a sign, and women love to kiss. Lucien was slender~
11 I | methods, which every man in love with glory tries first of~
12 I | him like a woman~sure of love, and David loved to give
13 I | comrades in the~consuming love of art and science, till
14 I | spoke.~ ~"Lucien, are you in love with Mme. de Bargeton?"~ ~"
15 I | have perhaps sacrificed my love to you," cried~Lucien.~ ~"
16 I | mean?"~ ~"In spite of my love, in spite of the different
17 II | wealth remained below. No love was lost between~these two
18 II | of a heavenly Jerusalem--love, in~short, without a lover.
19 II | a regiment, and fell~in love with an officer of a good
20 II | of a Marshal of~France. Love, restrained, greater and
21 II | for the heart~hot with love and glory that set a letter
22 II | wither, and the~longing for love is revived again with the
23 II | saved her from the shabby love intrigues of the provinces.
24 III | thought; she was slender; in love with love, and loverless;
25 III | was slender; in love with love, and loverless; and~delicate
26 III | for youth sets out with a love of hyperbole,~that infirmity
27 III | now he was desperately in love with her.~She would be his
28 III | that it~would be folly to love a young man of twenty, so
29 III | the~torture of a first love, that is beaten deep into
30 III | tears the piteous story of a love so~stainless, so cruelly
31 III | the progress of this new love in herself and her poet,~
32 III | Past,~Seek count of me,~Oh Love, when swift, thick-coming
33 III | Ambition blended with his love. He loved, and he meant
34 III | unworthy of his Louise's love (his proudest distinction)
35 III | naive utterances that women love so~well--unconscious revelations
36 III | brightest colors~of blossoming love. There was David; what a
37 III | tamed society. Women would love him~when that day came!
38 III | had none of the scholar's love for his retreat; for the
39 III | lodging and his fortune.~ ~"I love Mme. de Bargeton; perhaps
40 III | end to the strife between love and interest in his heart.
41 III | repressed and single-hearted love had grown up between them
42 III | from Lucien as though their~love in some way did him a wrong.
43 III | a solitary life; and the love that gained~even greater
44 III | back. But though his great love had only appeared in trifles,
45 III | The mute~delights of this love of theirs differed from
46 IV | murmur; for in a sister's love~for a brother it is an element
47 IV | has any sense, she must love you! And if so, to-night~
48 IV | refuge in our hearts, the love there will never change.
49 IV | your benefactress, your love it may be, rather than~forsake
50 IV | ambition? The aspirant for love and honors felt~that the
51 IV | the first~grace given by love.~ ~"But give me time to
52 IV | caprice will be gratified by love.~ ~Francis, the house friend,
53 V | Thy songs are sweet, I love to say them over," and~ended
54 V | the~outpouring of all the love in his heart, seemed to
55 V | origin divine.~ ~Nay, it was Love grown blind and dazed with
56 V | frigid~coldness.~ ~"If you love me, do not congratulate
57 V | remarked to Francis, "and love is~a poem that we live."~ ~"
58 V | have cost! We should~bow in love and reverence before the
59 V | Thy songs are sweet, I love to say them over.' "~ ~And
60 V | find nothing to say~to her. Love delights in such reverent
61 V | David, trying to proceed to~love by way of analogy. "Those
62 V | way of analogy. "Those who love find infinite delight in~
63 V | life. She will develop his love of enjoyment,~his inclination
64 V | her; or if she does not love him, she will make him unhappy,
65 V | when we~work for one we love; it is not drudgery. It
66 V | my life to him with the love that~hallows your self-sacrifice,
67 V | Dear Eve, marry me for love of Lucien; perhaps afterwards
68 V | perhaps afterwards you will~love me when you see how I shall
69 V | said Eve, moved by this love~that tried to explain away
70 V | and I am poor.~One must love indeed to overcome such
71 V | give. So I shall always love you~more than you love me,
72 V | always love you~more than you love me, because I have more
73 V | because I have more reason to love. You are an~angel; I am
74 V | Eve said, smiling. "I love you----"~ ~"As much as you
75 V | you----"~ ~"As much as you love Lucien?" he broke in.~ ~"
76 V | care of them."~ ~"Then you love me! Ah! say so without fear
77 V | who saw a symbol of~my love for you in your name. Eve
78 V | heart for me. My God! do you love me?"~ ~"Yes," said she,
79 V | splendor,~lighted up by love, grown fair through you.
80 VI | read to-night in her eyes a love as great as mine for her.
81 VI | passion to the novice in love. She abandoned her hands,~
82 VI | which I~must endure. Poor love! the world will not spare
83 VI | beloved that David was~in love with his sister Eve, and
84 VI | that his sister Eve was in love with~David, and that the
85 VI | strong through Louise's~love and M. de Bargeton's weakness,
86 VI | inspire. HE certainly is in love with her, but~as for Nais----"~ ~"
87 VI | enough~pleased. A young man's love has so many attractions--
88 VI | with Mme. de Bargeton."~ ~"Love knows nought of high or
89 VI | taken too much for~granted--love was still in the Platonic
90 VI | There are, for that matter, love affairs which start with
91 VI | betray the sweet crime of love, and so forth and so~forth.
92 VI | an exalted conception of love. Being given to exaggeration,~
93 VI | noble~creature regarded her love as a stimulating power;
94 VI | sentiment which hallows love and~turns it to worthy uses;
95 VI | it exalts and reverences love. Mme. de~Bargeton having
96 VI | have? Can it be that your love is influenced by the clamor
97 VI | cannot feel all the sincere love underlying my ideas, you
98 VI | are throwing doubts on my love to dispense yourself from~
99 VII | cry, so full of selfish love.~ ~A story of this kind
100 VII | heavy~indictments of illicit love laid to their charge. There
101 VII | I am ready to prove~my love for you at any time and
102 VII | public proclamation of his love. I need~not tell you that
103 VIII| days when the~springtide of love finds its reflection in
104 VIII| This little emulation in love and generosity could~but
105 VIII| with the progress of our love? Have you set your mind~
106 VIII| you shall know how much I love you. What is the good of
107 VIII| slept for seven years.~ ~"Love, you were saying just now
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