Chapter
1 I | Moreover, she is a lovable woman, and you, from your physique,
2 I | daughter in the hands of a woman like the Marquise is a fortune.
3 I | allures me, excites me, like a woman of a certain category, and
4 I | peculiar ways. When a young woman looks at existence through
5 I | never have had for any other woman the devotion which I have
6 I | the Marquise is not the woman to make a bad bargain; she
7 I | sweeping each low-gowned woman whom he knew with the look
8 I | bread. Well! the love of a woman in ordinary society always
9 II | I have the air of a mad woman, and to-morrow shall be
10 II | young girl as he would to a woman. He was perplexed, thinking
11 II | know nothing about her. A woman who has lived and loved,
12 II | That need of absorbing a woman in yourself or disappearing
13 II | never marry anyone but a woman of his set and his fortune.
14 II | to the conscience which a woman is expected to show in matters
15 III| keenness, and sharpness of a woman, understanding that she
16 III| exasperation of a passionate woman whose love is threatened,
17 III| want you to be an honest woman.”~These words which recurred,
18 IV | a newspaper how a young woman had managed to asphyxiate
19 IV | caressed his hair.~A stout woman indignantly exclaimed: “
20 IV | things possible!”~Another woman said: “Can people amuse
21 IV | I may not become a kept woman.~“YVETTE.”~Then in a postscript:~“
22 IV | and saw in it a face, a woman’s face. She began to scorn
23 IV | I may not become a kept woman.”~“Yvette.”~“Adieu, my dear
24 IV | himself the old couplet:~“A woman changeth oft her mind:~Yet
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