Chapter
1 III| nothing in life to~equal the happiness of two beings like yourselves
2 III| feeling, and~derived her happiness from quietness and work.
3 IV | felt anything but love and happiness where others often~see obligation.
4 IV | enter. But it involves a~happiness that will last throughout
5 IV | life. To see Luigi is a happiness without which I cannot live.~
6 IV | never enjoy, peacefully, any happiness which caused sorrow to~her
7 V | blessed her and prayed for her happiness in this~fatal marriage,
8 V | reflected, outwardly, the~happiness that reigned within their
9 V | of all the rest reflected happiness,~and seemed to be invoking
10 V | presence of that humming happiness sparkling in diamonds, gay
11 V | before~the public to obtain a happiness her parents refused to sanction.~ ~"
12 V | A sense of accomplished happiness now made the step of the
13 V | expression of childlike~happiness.~ ~She looked long at the
14 V | turned slowly, expressing the~happiness of a satisfied love. Ginevra
15 V | the thought of the perfect~happiness she might have had if this
16 V | purity of her~feelings, the happiness of love were there depicted
17 VI | floated on the ocean of their happiness, love~overwhelmed them with
18 VI | which usually crowns~the happiness of a household to them proved
19 VI | child. It was~their last happiness.~ ~Like two swimmers uniting
20 VI | transactions, and felt~a sort of happiness in recognizing an old officer
21 VI | suffered~too much; besides, a happiness so great as mine has to
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