Chapter
1 I | to buy what is for sale. Love and cards are on the programme,
2 I | and the men dishonest. I love that social mob of buccaneers
3 I | laugh and said: “You are in love with her.”~“No. I am on
4 I | shown to me.”~“You are in love,” Saval repeated.~“No. She
5 I | tell you that you are in love. You speak of her with the
6 I | continually. yes, perhaps I am in love. I dream about her too much.
7 I | around me, with me. Is this love, this physical infatuation?
8 I | t deny it.”~“So I am in love with her, but in a queer
9 I | impeccable virgin. She seems to love me and yet makes fun of
10 I | you breathe the odor of love among them, just as you
11 I | to make bread. Well! the love of a woman in ordinary society
12 I | bake-shop trifles, while the love you find at houses like
13 I | disturbed a couple making love on one of the benches, and
14 I | commonplace and amusing love is, always the same and
15 II | CHAPTER II. Bougival and Love~They had set the table on
16 II | believe that you are in love if you keep on being as
17 II | with whom could you be in love? Let us think together,
18 II | seem to me as if I were in love with the triumphal arch
19 II | beyond doubt that you are in love with me, for I am the only
20 II | replied with happy grace: “In love with you, Muscade? Ah! no.
21 II | I like you, but I don’t love you. Wait—I—I don’t want
22 II | discourage you. I don’t love you—yet. You have a chance—
23 II | you have shown me that you love me, by Jove!”~“Well, act
24 II | happy!”~“Then you don’t love me?”~“Oh, yes, Muscade,
25 II | me?”~“Oh, yes, Muscade, I love you, I love you a great
26 II | Muscade, I love you, I love you a great deal; only leave
27 II | Yvette!”~“Well, what?”~“I do love you!”~“But you are not in
28 II | explorations in the kingdom of love, awoke before this singular
29 II | one and one make two. In love one and one ought to make
30 II | have forgotten!”~“That I love you.”~“You?”~“Yes.”~“What
31 II | Muscade, if you really love me enough to marry me, speak
32 II | between us, but merely of love. I have told you that I
33 II | I have told you that I love you. It is the truth. I
34 II | is the truth. I repeat, I love you. Don’t pretend any longer
35 II | of the night.~Swayed by love as a person is moved by
36 II | women who are created to love and to be loved. Starting
37 II | and she really fell in love, which state lasted for
38 II | soul. She cast herself upon love as a person throws himself
39 II | exaltation of consummated love, of present and certain
40 II | one of those surprises of love which place adventuresses
41 II | still, she murmured:~“I love you, I love you!”~
42 II | murmured:~“I love you, I love you!”~
43 III| emboldened.~She spoke of love as the son of a painter
44 III| marriage between us—but only of love.”~What did he mean? And
45 III| the fruit of a clandestine love, taken in by the Marquise,
46 III| astonishment, an expansion of love, a confidence full of gestures
47 III| her uttered the words: “I love you!” And she heard nothing
48 III| more loudly: “Oh! how I love you! how I love you!” And
49 III| Oh! how I love you! how I love you!” And Yvette recognized
50 III| a passionate woman whose love is threatened, and she shuddered,
51 III| will both go away. I will love you so much that you will
52 IV | having stolen his son’s love, she might say in a proud
53 IV | well-known voice the alleluia of love.~It was the Marquise, who
54 IV | scarcely be heard: “Will you love me very much? Tell me!”~
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