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1 IV | hesitate to entrust the happiness of their daughters to~men
2 IV | to find the elements of~happiness in persistent work, Augustine
3 VI | made him a devotee; his happiness was incomplete till he~should
4 VI | her presence had brought happiness to him whose name was on
5 XI | axioms were that, to~secure happiness, a woman must marry a man
6 XII | Joseph Lebas, who found~his happiness in patience, and Mademoiselle
7 XII | which they all owed so much happiness.~ ~"Isn't it pretty!" cried
8 XII | like, risk your capital in happiness. But I am not going~to be
9 XII | appeared in all the radiance of happiness, their eyes beaming~with
10 XII | artist, intoxicated with happiness,~carried off his beloved
11 XIII | love.~ ~In the midst of her happiness, she was still the simple
12 XIII | the last gleam of conjugal happiness.~She first wounded her husband'
13 XIV | spread. To attain conjugal~happiness we must climb a hill whose
14 XIV | full~extent of that lost happiness, and accepted the conclusion
15 XV | the heart by the equable happiness, devoid,~to be sure, of
16 XV | wife,~the time that his happiness had taken to germinate was
17 XV | eighteen months of such~happiness as, in her eyes, was worth
18 XVII | instrument of her future~happiness, since she was the cause
19 XVIII| never pray to God for my own~happiness with so much fervor as I
20 XIX | serious tone, "conjugal~happiness has in all times been a
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