Chapter
1 I | of thought for him as any lover for his mistress; giving
2 I | heart and heart. With a lover's insight,~David read the
3 I | us," returned the alarmed lover, as Eve's fair face~rose
4 II | tastes, and flight with a lover who should please her, she
5 II | love, in~short, without a lover. And this was indeed the
6 III | poet's imagination, the lover was by no means afraid of~
7 III | it with the frenzy of a lover and a~poet in his youth.
8 IV | small deceits with which the lover of a married woman~pays
9 V | skies~Whom earth like a lover fain would hold from the
10 V | through you. That is not a lover's~speech, but sober, serious
11 VI | news. Mme. de Bargeton's lover had been~dreaming of a great
12 VI | furnished his first floor~with a lover's lavishness, built a second
13 VI | laid it in David's; and the lover, grown bolder on this, kissed~
14 VI | beginning to end; he is the~lover's poet. You shall not be
15 VI | Yes," he answered, with a lover's pout of vexation.~ ~"Child!"
16 VI | unsatisfied and maintain a lover's arguments on the~intellectual
17 VI | had not been cruel to her lover, and Amelie goaded them
18 VI | transformed into an urgent lover. Six~months had been enough
19 VI | give her time to judge her lover.~ ~Lucien began the strife
20 VIII| wound which caused the poor lover cruel pangs. The~cost of
21 VIII| added, surprised that her lover made no answer.~ ~To Lucien,
22 VIII| distracted, sprang to her lover's arms, and kissed him tenderly,~
|