Part, Chapter
1 I, I | bitter. Now that he was able to reason, he asked himself
2 I, I | extended, and that he had been able to clasp in full embrace
3 I, II | considering, without being able to give a good reason for
4 I, II | apartment when he was quite able to live like a great lord
5 I, III| his home, and not being able to meet the one he loved
6 I, IV | rooms. Not being always able to hold and keep him, she
7 II, II | anything she might have been able to foresee.~“You will go
8 II, II | on the contrary, of being able to command preference, in
9 II, II | dissatisfaction at not being able to charm her, to dominate
10 II, II | gentler means, and, not being able to win her attention he
11 II, III| without a doubt, not being able to admit the existence of
12 II, III| by you will no longer be able to deceive yourself regarding
13 II, V | woman, she never had been able to satisfy—that desire to
14 II, V | suffer thus under doubt, not able to read that closed heart,
15 II, V | then, had this child been able to capture him with a few
16 II, V | service, if she had been able to choose and use delicately
17 II, VI | as to how Goethe had been able to conceive the heart of
18 II, VI | the follies that he was able to create, so seductive,
19 II, VI | by the arm, sure of being able soon to lead him to talk
20 II, VI | she.~He stammered, hardly able to speak, so great was his
21 II, VI | which remained closed, to be able to say one word more to
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