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1 IV | decorated her head--that~of a woman near on sixty--with a cap
2 VII | from the union of a loving woman with a~man of imagination,
3 VII | delicacy of sentiment which a woman can~always appreciate, even
4 X | drapery business, you see, a woman is not so~necessary now
5 X | liked it. But so long as a woman~knows how to turn her hand
6 XI | half,~who, like an angry woman, sat tapping the floor with
7 XI | to~secure happiness, a woman must marry a man of her
8 XIII | himself with a handsome woman, the object~of envy and
9 XIV | prerogative of a~married woman; and Augustine, though she
10 XIV | marriage this pretty young woman, who dashed~past in her
11 XIV | saw herself deserted for a woman of~six-and-thirty. Feeling
12 XIV | all the energy which every woman~can display when she loves,
13 XV | desk. The unhappy young woman met her brother-in-law~with
14 XV | luxury. The fashionable~woman found some tickets for a
15 XVI | does he object to see a woman eating? What queer~notion
16 XVII | could discern was that, as~a woman, the Duchess was a superior
17 XVII | Stay; you will see a~pretty woman, and make her visit seem
18 XVIII| was compulsory. The young woman saw before her a~superfluous
19 XVIII| expression is known to every woman. She perceived~with the
20 XIX | hundred years, you~are not a woman, and you deserve your fate."~ ~
21 XIX | purity of a less virtuous woman than Augustine, for the~
22 XIX | eloquence~which never desert a woman; then, as she pictured to
23 XX | acts and words which any woman not~so young as Augustine
24 XX | does not need a~stronger woman than Augustine to endure
25 Add | The Firm of Nucingen~A Woman of Thirty~ ~Birotteau, Cesar~
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