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1 I | The Comte de Fontaine, head of one of the oldest families
2 I | Monsieur de Fontaine was the head of too large a family~to
3 II | contrary direction. The last head of the House of Bourbon
4 II | These new notions of the head of the Fontaines, and the
5 II | hardly mitigate. So when the head of the family felt a slight~
6 II | variety of those turns of the head and~feminine gestures, which
7 III | decorating his bald yellow head with the delta~of powder
8 III | appear in the presence of the head of the family.~ ~"Joseph,"
9 III | his~handiwork, jerked his head, and went.~ ~The anxious
10 III | an ironical toss of her head.~ ~"My dear, do not so depreciate
11 IV | eyes were turned to the head of the family. Every one~
12 IV | or praising a study of a head,~a painting of genre. Her
13 IV | that he had half turned his head, and bent it a little to
14 IV | too much promise in that~head, too much distinction in
15 IV | she turned and tossed her head, gesticulated eagerly, and~
16 V | little pouting face, bent her head, and finally smiled.~When
17 V | satisfaction of seeing~him turn his head to look at her. The young
18 V | The old man bowed his gray head, which was not unlike a
19 V | chimera at the fountain-~head of the imaginary wealth
20 VII | She presently raised her head, looked~at her father, and
21 VII | She gracefully~raised her head, seemed to find new life
22 VII | de Fontaine, shaking his head from side to side,~"his
23 VIII| observed;~she turned her head and saw her former lover
24 VIII| had placed on~Maximilien's head the hereditary plumes of
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