Chapter

 1   III|        fall over head and ears in love with the handsome youth,
 2    IV|           with the innocence, the love, and the spiritual welfare
 3    IV|       must smile, laugh, and make love to men whom they see for
 4    IV|       money out of his daughters' love affairs, and whose house
 5     V|         never forgotten her first love. In the mean time her family
 6     V|           thing to sing frivolous love ditties on an open stage
 7    VI|          honestly that she was in love, in love body and soul,
 8    VI|          that she was in love, in love body and soul, with all
 9    VI|         day meant to repay with a love stronger than death; and
10    VI|           she felt that she would love him henceforth to the last
11    VI|         It was a case of hopeless love all round. He loved the
12    VI|          of the flowers, "Does he love me, or does he not love
13    VI|           love me, or does he not love me?" What will they not
14    VI|         wine into our glasses and love into our hearts. That will
15    VI|        for fighting than the mere love of swagger. There was nothing
16  VIII|   terribly great gentleman was in love with her, and would have
17  VIII|          quit my country, which I love as well as, ay, and ever
18  VIII|   ambition, extravagance, and the love of luxury, and the later
19  VIII|       think I don't know whom you love? Speak out! don't be such
20  VIII|         coward! Tell the girl you love her, and cannot do without
21  VIII|      praised him, but that is not love.~ ~All through supper Boltay
22  VIII|        worthy man that he is; but love him I cannot. I will marry
23  VIII|     accept your hand without your love. No, let us talk of something
24  VIII|        not young; but, instead of love, he promises you ease and
25  VIII|    fancied they could buy Fanny's love for a few shameful thousands
26  VIII|           bride! No, nobody could love him so truly, oh, so truly
27  VIII|       tell him so, but she should love him to the death!~ ~Why
28  VIII|           of a dotard she did not love?~ ~But again, there were
29  VIII|           leads thee on. No; 'tis Love that goes before thee with
30    IX|           She will not be able to love me any more. She will loathe
31    IX|         she loves you dearly, you love her too. One thing, however,
32    IX|      husband, made him positively love her. Mr. Boltay was obliged
33    IX|         country gentleman fell in love with Rézi and carried her
34    IX|            Those poetic gentlemen love to scribble about ideals
35    IX|       that. He was no minister of love, not he! He only gave people
36    IX|      cards to-day, for, so far as love is concerned, everything
37    IX|       Luckless at cards, lucky at love,' does not seem to apply
38    IX|           ostentatiously with his love, should have become his
39    IX|          at cards, and unlucky in love as well. Poor Abellino!
40    IX|      woman would find some one to love. Damnation! Damnation!~ ~
41     X|       their possessor peace, joy, love, contentment, and a good
42     X| sympathetic damsel whom she might love like sisters - though not
43     X|       which of them are likely to love one, and which are likely
44     X|       before me, nevertheless the love - I beg pardon - the respect
45     X|         the wife so worthy of his love, which is the regular course" (
46     X|          A wife so worthy of your love as yours is, is a treasure
47     X|         delighted you have got to love each other so much all at
48    XI|         fear of her; for she will love you, make herself your champion,
49    XI|         you fancy she is quite in love with you. It is of no use
50  XIII|         Lady Szentirmay sends her love; she has just gone."~ ~Fanny
51    XV|      prove that that woman was in love with some one; if any one
52   XVI|     likewise."~ ~"It is because I love you so. My love of you is
53   XVI|         because I love you so. My love of you is so devoted, so
54  XVII|          occasionally in order to love each other all the better
55  XVII|          are concerned; but I can love, and nobody shall forbid
56  XVII|         nobody shall forbid me to love whom I will." And with that
57  XVII|        But, indeed, who would not love you?"~ ~But Fanny could
58  XVII|   inferior to her in beauty.~ ~"I love flowers," stammered Fanny,
59  XVII|  inclinations, grief and sorrows, love and anguish, just as much
60  XVII|         adored wanted to make her love him. If this was sport on
61  XVII|       risky books in private, and love to be rigid moralists in
62  XVII|         me! I beg of you not your love but your pity; I shall know
63    XX|      ground, he might confess his love, he had as much right now
64    XX|       ashamed of in that. One may love the dead. I loved that woman,
65    XX|       dead. I loved that woman, I love her now, and I shall never
66    XX|        her now, and I shall never love another."~ ~Rudolf's heart
67    XX|         in an agony of despairing love, in order that there she
68   XXI|         be, and who, if he cannot love him better than I love him,
69   XXI|     cannot love him better than I love him, will, at least, love
70   XXI|         love him, will, at least, love him more wisely. The man
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