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1 II | cause, and a cruel one.~ ~In love with his wife before he
2 II | his patron Moreau fell in love with~the countess's waiting-woman
3 III | gone, of blind~maternal love, of sufferings heroically
4 IV | count, "some intrigue,--a love affair! Youth is~happy!"~ ~
5 IV | credulous air, "a man must love a woman~well to make such
6 IV | one's loved;~plenty of love, plenty of women; but they
7 IV | believe you married, out of love, the beautiful Adelaide
8 IV | is fine only to those who love it; a man must have a passion
9 IV | Schinner.~ ~"I was too much in love to take any notice of what
10 IV | Zena resisted. As my sweet love spoke~only Greek, and I
11 IV | up with~the language of love.' Instead of which, fate
12 V | his wife; he is madly in love with her; no~one knows more
13 VI | of the chateau. We both love art, and,~above all, artists,"
14 VI | their stay.~ ~"You say you love art, madame; perhaps you
15 VI | soul of any man able to love deeply at the~count's age
16 VI | together, you who knew~my love for Madame de Serizy,--that
17 VIII| he is indefatigable. I love him, that~fellow! He has
18 IX | he gave the girl, out~of love for the choregraphic art,
19 IX | early from the arts, and love, and Camusot. As~old Cardot
20 XI | the traces of disasters in love and a life of debauchery
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