Part, Chapter
1 I, II | themselves becoming, by an irresistible fatality, light and graceful
2 I, IV | captivated the eye with irresistible fascination.~Other paintings
3 II, II | emerge.~She had an almost irresistible desire to weep—and would
4 II, II | his arms to her with an irresistible impulse, and in a voice
5 II, II | longing to be yours, an irresistible need of giving myself to
6 II, II | that bold, capricious, irresistible charm, like the grace of
7 II, III| within her surged up an irresistible longing to be comforted
8 II, III| after twelve years, an irresistible flood of emotion overwhelming
9 II, IV | without being seized with an irresistible sensuous desire to caress
10 II, IV | house he was seized with irresistible uneasiness, a sort of paralysis
11 II, V | fermentation of love, that irresistible attraction; but he would
12 II, V | heart; then all that slow, irresistible renewal of a love not yet
13 II, V | youthful ardor, a wave of irresistible tenderness which called
14 II, V | filled her soul with an irresistible need of verifying it in
15 II, V | hand would steal out, by an irresistible impulse, toward the little
16 II, VI | house with the invisible and irresistible mystery of the music that
17 II, VI | phrase sung by Montrose with irresistible power stirred him to the
18 II, VI | This was not the real, irresistible, and sinister Chevalier
19 II, VI | he appeared that he was irresistible, had felt their hearts throb
20 II, VI | love has become something irresistible, destroying, stronger than
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