Chapter
1 I | dream about her too much. I think of her when I am asleep
2 I | waits and watches. But I think that she has views about
3 I | I would not have anyone think me capable of borrowing
4 I | through my hands. Now I think I have him, and then I find
5 I | conversation. One would think that you were not at all
6 I | asked: “Well, what do you think of it?”~“It certainly is
7 II | true. It is so sweet to think together about agreeable
8 II | could you be in love? Let us think together, if you will; I
9 II | My poor Muscade, can you think of such a thing? Why, the
10 II | her. At heart I begin to think that she is making sport
11 II | shall take me. They will think that we have gone into the
12 II | would be soon enough to think about the difficulties when
13 II | take a hint.”~She did not think out what she should say
14 III| zelle.”~“Well, what do you think, way down in your heart,
15 III| she resumed:~“What do you think of the Countess de Lammy?”~
16 III| opinion of them all. Come, think; won’t you make a single
17 III| asked: “Well, what do you think of me?”~“You want me to
18 III| tell. Well, so be it. I think you are a young person of
19 III| again, and then she began to think.~Her mother! A lover! What
20 III| alone; then she began to think. The chambermaid knocked
21 IV | I shall speak no more, think no more, no one will see
22 IV | She forced herself not to think of the evening, the chosen
23 IV | and the Chevalier began to think the joke was being carried
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