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1 II | compelled by the evidence of his eyes to~admit that the count'
2 II | ridiculous was jealousy in the eyes~of a society that would
3 II | figure, two light and eager eyes, fair hair plastered down
4 III| years of age; but her blue eyes, deprived of the fire which
5 III| his early childhood his eyes were dazzled by imperial~
6 III| vehicle with tears in her eyes.~ ~"Don't forget to give
7 III| man assumed, in Oscar's eyes, the~proportions of a personage.~ ~
8 III| Ambigu-Comique, where his eyes could~see little elegance,
9 III| elegance, if indeed the eyes of a child riveted on a~
10 III| vivacity of his bright gray eyes. The~animation of his brown
11 III| seemed enormous.~His smiling eyes were sunken in rolls of
12 III| find in his green-~gray eyes the shrewdness of the magistrate,
13 III| about him betrayed to the~eyes of youth a peer of France,
14 IV | Waterloo!" cried Oscar, his eyes stretching wide open.~ ~"
15 IV | pleasure, he fastened his eyes, sparkling with wrath and
16 IV | creature in the town; almond eyes, lids that dropped like
17 IV | still illuminated by the eyes of~Zena," continued Schinner. "
18 IV | was daring enough to make~eyes at her in the midst of the
19 IV | for your death! Ah! those eyes~were so many flames, all
20 V | they won't keep~their eyes in their pockets."~ ~The
21 V | glitters,'" he began, his eyes flaming.~ ~"That's not it,"
22 VI | other than his own. His blue eyes~and a large crow-beaked
23 VI | threatening because his eyes were placed too close together.
24 VI | Madame~Moreau, who, in the eyes of the peasants, was really
25 VI | travelling companion in the eyes of their~hostess; but it
26 VI | hands and~feet struck their eyes, and presently a word, or
27 VI | Poor Oscar had tears in his eyes as he looked in turn from
28 VI | Moreau, with~tears in his eyes. "Yes, you are right; if
29 VII| Clapart.~ ~To bourgeois eyes, the obtaining of school
30 VII| state to excite~pity. Her eyes, worn with tears; her face,
31 VII| unhappy old age, I fastened my~eyes on you; I saw you with the
32 VII| which sparkled his gray eyes; and for a square nose,
33 IX | ambassador. Therefore keep your eyes~open, and if there's the
34 IX | became an~"old screw" in the eyes of his protegee; but as
35 IX | Florentine was~to close his eyes; he meant to leave her a
36 IX | gold cords,~dazzled all eyes. The flowers of the carpet
37 IX | curiosities danced before the eyes of the new-~comers.~ ~At
38 IX | his~handkerchief to his eyes, and wept. Florentine noticed
39 IX | sofa in the~boudoir, his eyes closing in a leaden sleep.~ ~"
40 X | what?" she asked.~ ~The eyes of the danseuse followed
41 X | brought~him before the eyes of the public. During the
42 XI | bloated, vinous features. The eyes had lost the~brilliancy,
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