Part, Chapter
1 I, I | contributed much to his glory.~His grace of manner, all his habits
2 I, I | fashions, in revealing feminine grace enclosed within a prison
3 I, I | all the alert and youthful grace of those Parisian women
4 I, I | urged him toward an ideal of grace that was slightly affected
5 I, I | ingenious interpreter of their grace, their bearing, and their
6 I, I | with a charming vision of grace and elegance.~On inquiring
7 I, I | in the same way, with a grace at once daring and delicate.~
8 I, I | only coquettish with added grace, as a woman always is toward
9 I, I | of her countenance or her grace of bearing. All of which
10 I, I | and before him, with her grace, her beauty and elegance.
11 I, II | new discussions on their grace, their chic and beauty.
12 I, II | its youthful smile, the grace of its pose, the bright
13 I, III| blond with brown eyes, whose grace and beauty had served for
14 I, III| by little, the undecided grace of youth, really assumed
15 I, IV | daughter a quarter of an hour’s grace, then half an hour, and
16 II, II | preference, in the ripe grace of her womanhood, over that
17 II, II | had that fawn-like, supple grace, that bold, capricious,
18 II, II | irresistible charm, like the grace of a running, leaping animal.
19 II, V | be attracted by Annette’s grace. It was not at all the same
20 II, V | captivating as the inert grace of her daughter, she would
21 II, V | charm, her freshness and grace; she begged only a little
|