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1 I | man about forty years of age, was already the father
2 II | only twenty-two years of age, was even then~distinguished
3 II | 1806,~when forty years of age, he married the sister of
4 III | be about forty~years of age; but her blue eyes, deprived
5 III | eighteen or nineteen years of age.~The blue trousers, mended
6 III | have been sixteen years of age, wore a gray blouse~buckled
7 III | remember the respect~you owe to age; you don't know how shockingly
8 IV | thinks he has discovered the age, profession, and~character
9 IV | was sixty-nine years of age,~and jealous! not as a tiger,
10 V | before I reach your present age. When I once become a~personage
11 V | he had just reached the age when the beard sprouts and
12 V | his son, who is about my~age, nineteen; we ride together
13 VI | about thirty-six years of age, still slender and~delicate
14 VI | love deeply at the~count's age is still young and sensitive
15 VII | suffered mentally. At his age mental~impressions succeed
16 VII | for myself an unhappy old age, I fastened my~eyes on you;
17 VII | poll he concealed an old age~almost wholly given up to
18 VII | the pleasures which old age naturally desires after
19 VII | except an annuity;~and at my age one clings to old habits.
20 VII | what he likes in his old~age, and sings, as I do, 'La
21 VII | say:~Remember that at your age honesty and uprightness
22 VIII| man twenty-six years of age, born of poor parents,~and
23 VIII| comrade."~ ~At twenty years of age, Oscar became third clerk
24 IX | about thirteen years of age), he followed her to~the
25 IX | benefactor. To him this was the age of gold.~ ~For three years
26 IX | father. This was his silver age.~ ~From 1820 to 1823, Florentine
27 IX | nineteen to twenty years of age. Her friends were the illustrious~
28 IX | strong. This~was the brass age for the old fellow.~ ~During
29 IX | seventy Florentine would be of age,~probably engaged at the
30 IX | thousand francs.~The iron age had now begun.~ ~Georges
31 IX | Oscar, at~twenty years of age, have the wisdom to listen
32 X | hundred francs at play at your age?"~ ~"Oh, uncle, uncle!"
33 X | bread to eat in our old age we may owe it~all to that
34 X | another thing. I shall~be of age in a few months; and you
35 X | would have yielded to at~my age," said Oscar to Moreau, "
36 X | youth,~and who, in her old age, turns to repentance. She
37 XI | about thirty-four years of age, in whom~observers would
38 XI | woman of fifty-four years of age. She is very~elegant, and,
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