The 7,491 occurrences of make love

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~   ~   ~   Sentence 12,596   ~   ~   ~

Just what he had feared a year ago, when Nancy first asked him to make love to her, had happened.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 4,835   ~   ~   ~

A man does more good, as a rule, by working for himself and his family, than by acting like a 'moral Don Quixote,[157] who is capable of making love for men in general the ground of all sorts of violence against men in particular.'

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,770   ~   ~   ~

We there, too, found both the time and the opportunity of exercising one of the agreeable professions to which we had long been strangers, that of making love to the pretty little girls with which the place abounded; when, after a three months' residence among them, the fatal order arrived for our march to Bordeaux, for embarkation, the buckets full of salt tears that were shed by men who had almost forgotten the way to weep was quite ridiculous.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 4,366   ~   ~   ~

If the worst comes to the worst, I'll make love to her.'

~   ~   ~   Sentence 4,159   ~   ~   ~

"I think it is all I can do to keep from making love to you!"

~   ~   ~   Sentence 401   ~   ~   ~

The future career which she foresaw and wanted to share belonged to a young clergyman, who--according to the reminiscences of an aged relative of hers--"hung round her at the harpsichord," and made love in quite another fashion than that of the solemn statesman whom the old general so approved of.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,393   ~   ~   ~

Intuition, our own selfhood, is nature's highest teacher, and infallible; and tells all, by her "still, small voice within," whether and just wherein they are making love right or wrong.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,508   ~   ~   ~

A lady, asked why she didn't marry, since she had so many making love to her, replied: "Because being courted is too great a luxury to be spoilt by marrying."

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,358   ~   ~   ~

But I want Daisy to see how easily and readily he makes love to a woman.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 731   ~   ~   ~

"Oh, of course, Feemy; I was making love to the three Miss Cassidys, and Jane Thompson, and old widow Brennan at once.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,299   ~   ~   ~

But I was yet mair astonished and ashamed, when the auld body, sleeking down his hair and his chin, had the assurance to make love to me!

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,563   ~   ~   ~

Madame Mathilde had two husbands living when I made love to her, and declined to take a third.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 3,570   ~   ~   ~

"Why, here is Mr. Burns making love to me at breakfast, and before night he will be abusing me for not pouring enough rum in his punch!"

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,633   ~   ~   ~

To John it seemed the years had made Rosamond nearer the Rosamond of his dream than the youthful Rosamond who had wandered over the hills with him and to whom he had made love.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 266   ~   ~   ~

They fear no one and they are dependent on no one; when they are young they make love and sing to the guitar, and when they are old they tell stories and bring up their children.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 6,482   ~   ~   ~

"Louise, don't make love to me," replied Pan.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,151   ~   ~   ~

Perhaps I might have been sorry I had scratched, if he had not gone on with talk against Peter Storm, as he always does if he finds me alone, or else he makes love.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,969   ~   ~   ~

We expected C. to take a fiendish joy in the prospect of kicking me when I was down: "putting me into my place" and making love to Miss Moore before my starting eyes--a great triumph for him after the very different Long Island trip in the same car with some of the same passengers.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,435   ~   ~   ~

One of the milk girls from the barracks wanted to know whatever I had been doing, and I told her that I had been making love too freely with John Barleycorn.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 12,973   ~   ~   ~

And how deeply He seem'd to suffer when Maria swoon'd, And half made love to her!

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,874   ~   ~   ~

And how deeply He seem'd to suffer when Maria swoon'd, And half made love to her!

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,818   ~   ~   ~

It is only when he is making love that he is poisonous--to all but his females; but in this, gentlemen, he is scarcely worse than many of yourselves, whom it is not safe then to approach."

~   ~   ~   Sentence 174   ~   ~   ~

CONTENTS CHAPTER I MOTHERHOOD PAGE A sterile Royal Family once fruitful--Diary true record of self--Long legs of Countess Solms--A child only because he can't help it--Wet nurse to Socialist brat--Royal permit for nursing--Royal negligee talk--A Saxon failing 1 CHAPTER II THE SWEET FAMILY Husband loving, but family nasty--Money considerations--Brutal caresses in public--Pests in the family--Awful serenity--Meddle with angels' or devils' affairs--Father-in-law's gritty kiss 7 CHAPTER III WEEPING WILLOW--EMBLEM ROYAL A pious fraud--Theresa Mayer--Character of the Queen--Mopishness rampant 11 CHAPTER IV MY UNPLEASANT YOUTH Father hard to get along with--Royal imaginations--Kings cursing other kings--Poverty and pretense--Piety that makes children suffer--Up at five to pray on cold stones--Chilblains and prayer 15 CHAPTER V A FIERCE DISCIPLINARIAN Diamonds used to punish children--Face object of attacks-- Grunting and snorting at the royal table--Blood flowing at dinner--My brother jumps out of a window 19 CHAPTER VI LEOPOLD DEFENDS MY HONOR AT HIS PERIL Punished for objecting to familiarities--Awful names I was called--Locked in the room with wicked teacher--Defend myself with burning lamp--My brother nearly kills my would-be assailant 23 CHAPTER VII PRINCES AND PRINCESSES DANCE TO THE TUNE OF THE WHIP The result shows in the character of rulers--Why English kings and princes are superior to the Continental kind--Leopold's awful revenge--Mother acts the tigress--Her mailed fist--"I forbid Your Imperial Highness to see that dog" 27 CHAPTER VIII PLANNING TO GET A HUSBAND FOR ME Dissecting possible wooers at Vienna--Royalty after money, not character--"He is a Cohen, not a Coburg"--Prince who looked like a Jew counter-jumper in his Sunday best--Balkan princes tabooed by Francis Joseph--A good time for the girls--Army men commanded to attend us 35 CHAPTER IX LOVE-MAKING The fascinating Baron--The man's audacity--Putting the question boldly--Real love-making--_Risqué_ stories for royalty 41 CHAPTER X MY POPULARITY RENDERS GEORGE DYSPEPTIC The Cudgel-Majesty--Prince George's intrigues--No four-horse coach for Princess--Popular demonstration in my favor--"All-highest" displeasure 45 CHAPTER XI SCOLDED FOR BEING POPULAR Entourage spied upon by George's minions--My husband proves a weakling--I disavow the personal compliment--No more intelligent than a king should be 53 CHAPTER XII ROYAL DISGRACE--LIGHTNING AND SHADOWS Ordered around by the Queen--Give thanks to a bully--Jealous of the "mob's" applause--"The old monkey after '_Hochs_'"--Criticizing the "old man"--Royalty's plea for popularity--Proposed punishments for people refusing to love royalty 57 CHAPTER XIII UNSPEAKABLE LITTLENESSES OF PETTY COURTS Another quarrel with my husband--Personal attendant to a corpse--Killing by pin pricks--The mythical three "_How art thou's?_"--Unwanted sympathy from my inferiors--Pride of the decapitated Queen of France is in me--Lovers not impossible--Court to blame for them--My husband acts cowardly--Brutalizes my household--I lock myself in 63 CHAPTER XIV IMPERIAL RUSSIAN ETHICS TRANSFERRED TO DRESDEN My husband's reported escapade--Did he give diamonds to a dancing girl?--His foolish excuses--"I am your pal"--A restaurant scene in St. Petersburg--The birthday suit 71 CHAPTER XV ROYALTY NOT PRETTY, AND WHY Fecundity royal women's greatest charm--How to have beautiful children 77 CHAPTER XVI MORE JEALOUSIES OF THE GREAT Men and women caress me with their eyes--Some disrespectful sayings and doings of mine--First decided quarrel with Frederick Augustus--I go to the theatre in spite of him 81 CHAPTER XVII THE ROYAL PRINCE, WHO BEHAVES LIKE A DRUNKEN BRICKLAYER I face the music, but my husband runs away--Prince George can't look me in the eye--He roars and bellows--Advocates wife-beating--I defy him--German classics--"Jew literature" _Auto da fé_ ordered 85 CHAPTER XVIII I DEFY THEM Laughter and pleasant faces for me--Frederick Augustus refuses to back me, but I don't care--We quarrel about my reading--He professes to gross ignorance 91 CHAPTER XIX ATTEMPTED VIOLENCE DEFEATED BY FIRMNESS Frederick Augustus seeks to carry out his father's brutal threats--Orders and threats before servants--I positively refuse to be ordered about--Frederick Augustus plays Mrs. Lot--Enjoying myself at the theatre 95 CHAPTER XX TITLED SERVANTS LOW AND CUNNING George tries to rob me of my confidante--Enter the King's spy, Baroness Tisch in her true character--Punishment of one royal spy 99 CHAPTER XXI BANISHMENT I am ordered to repair to a country house with the hated spy as my Grand Mistress--My first impulse to go home, but afraid parents won't have me 103 CHAPTER XXII "POOR RELATIONS" IN ROYAL HOUSES Myself and Frederick Augustus quarrel and pound table--The Countess Cosel's golden vessel--Off to Brighton--Threat of a beating--I provoke shadows of divorce--King threatens force--More defiance on my part--I humble the King and am allowed to invite my brother Leopold 105 CHAPTER XXIII A SERVANT-TYRANT My correspondence is not safe from the malicious woman appointed Grand Mistress--Lovers at a distance and by correspondence--Fell in love with a leg 115 CHAPTER XXIV MORE TYRANNY OF A TITLED SERVANT My daily papers seized, and only milk-and-water clippings are submitted--"King's orders"--Grand Mistress's veracity doubted--My threats of suspension cow her 119 CHAPTER XXV THE TWO BLACK SHEEP OF THE FAMILY UNITED Leopold upon my troubles and his own--Imperial Hapsburgs that, though Catholics, got divorces or married divorced women--Books that are full of guilty knowledge, according to royalty--A mud-hole lodging for one Imperial Highness--Leopold's girl--What I think of army officers' wives--Their anonymous letters--Leopold's money troubles--We will fool our enemies by feigning obedience 123 CHAPTER XXVI FREDERICK AUGUSTUS CONTINUES VERY RAW Manners _à la_ barracks natural to royal princes--Names I am called--My ladies scandalized--Leopold turned over a new leaf, according to agreement, and is well treated--The King grateful to me for having "influenced Leopold to be good" 129 CHAPTER XXVII PRINCE MAX MAKES LOVE TO ME Wants me to consult him on all spiritual matters--Warns me against the Kaiser, the heretic bishop--Princes as ill-mannered as Russian-Jew up-starts 133 CHAPTER XXVIII THE SHAH OF PERSIA FALLS IN LOVE WITH ME The "animal" and his show of diamonds and rubies--Overcome by love he treats me like a lady of the harem--On the defensive--The King of kings an ill-behaved brute--Eats like a pig and affronts Queen--Wiped off greasy hands on my state robe--When ten thousand gouged-out eyes carpeted his throne--Offers of jewels--"Does he take me for a ballet girl?"

~   ~   ~   Sentence 175   ~   ~   ~

--The Shah almost compromises me--King, alarmed, abruptly ends dinner--I receive presents from him 135 CHAPTER XXIX THE SHAH COMPROMISES ME IN PUBLIC Has only eyes for me at the grand manoeuvres, and I can't drive him from my carriage--Ignores the King and the military spectacle--Calls me his adored one--Court in despair--Shah ruins priceless carpets to make himself a lamb stew 139 CHAPTER XXX MY LIFE AT COURT BECOMES UNBEARABLE Laughter a crime--Disappointed Queen lays down the law for my behavior--Frederick Augustus sometimes fighting drunk--Draws sword on me--Prince George would have me beaten--To bed with his boots on 143 CHAPTER XXXI PRISON FOR PRINCES THAT OPPOSE THE KING Duke of Saxony banished--Cut off from good literature even--Anecdote concerning the Grand Dauphin and his "kettledrums"--A royal prince's garrison life--His association with lewd women 147 CHAPTER XXXII PRINCE GEORGE SHOWN THE DOOR BY GRAND-DUCHESS MELITA A royal lady who walks her garden attired in a single diaphanous garment--Won't stand for any meddling--Called impertinent--My virtuous indignation assumed--A flirtation at a distance--An audacious lover--The Grand Mistress hoodwinked--Matrimonial horns for Kaiser--The banished Duke dies--Princes scolded like school-boys 151 CHAPTER XXXIII MELITA'S LOVE AFFAIRS AND MINE The Grand Duchess tells me how she cudgeled George--Living dictaphone employed--Shows him who is mistress of the house--Snaps fingers in Prince George's face--Debate about titles--"A sexless thing of a husband"--Conference between lover and husband--Grand Duke doesn't object to his wife's lover, but lover objects to "his paramour being married" 157 CHAPTER XXXIV MORE ABOUT THE SWEET ROYAL FAMILY LIFE "Closed season" for petty meannesses--A prince who enjoys himself like a pig--Why princes learn trades--A family dinner to the accompaniment of threats and smashing of table--The Duke's widow and children robbed of their inheritance by royal family--King confiscates testament 163 CHAPTER XXXV FLIRTATION DEVELOPS INTO LOVE At the theatre--My adorer must have felt my presence--Forgot his diplomacy--The mute salute--His good looks--His mouth a promise of a thousand sweet kisses--Our love won't be any painted business 169 CHAPTER XXXVI COUNT BIELSK MAKES LOVE TO THE CROWN PRINCESS Fearless to indiscretion--He "thou's" me--Puts all his chances on one card--Proposes a rendezvous--Shall I go or shall I not go?--Peril if I go and peril if I don't 171 CHAPTER XXXVII RAPID LOVE MAKING IN THE BOIS A discreet maid--"Remove thy glove"--Kisses of passion, pure kisses, powerful kisses--I see my lover daily--Countess Barnello offers "doves' nest"--Driving to rendezvous in state--"Naughty Louise," who makes fun of George 177 CHAPTER XXXVIII "IN LOVE THERE ARE NO PRINCESSES, ONLY WOMEN" A diplomatic trick--Jealous of Romano's past--The pact for life and the talisman--If there were a theatre fire the talisman would discover our love to the King--Some ill-natured reflections--Bernhardt's escapades cover up my tracks--The "black sheep" jumps his horse over a coffin--King gives him a beating--Bernhardt's mess-room lingo--Anecdotes of royal voluptuaries--Forces animals to devour each other--Naked ballet-girls as horses--Abnormals rule the world 183 CHAPTER XXXIX MY PUNISHMENT I lose my lover--Quarrels with me because I did my duty as a mother--Royalty extols me for the same reason---My pride of kingship aroused by Socialist scribblers--Change my opinion as to Duke's widow--Parents arrive--Father and his alleged astrolatry--His finances disarranged by alimony payments--My uncle, the Emperor, rebukes mother harshly for complaining of _roué_ father 193 CHAPTER XL A PLEBEIAN LOVER In need of a friend--My physician offers his friendship--I discover that he loves me, but he will never confess--I give him encouragement--We manage to persuade the King to further our intrigue--Not a bit repentant of my peccadilloes--Very submissive--Introduced to my lover's wife 199 CHAPTER XLI AN ATROCIOUS ROYAL SCANDAL A royal couple that shall be nameless--The voluptuous Duchess--Her husband the worst of degenerates--"What monsters these royalties be"--Nameless outrages--A Duchess forced to have lovers--Ferdinand and I live like married folk--Duchess feared for her life--Her husband murdered her--I scold and humiliate my overbearing Grand Mistress--The medical report too horrible to contemplate 205 CHAPTER XLII I LOSE ANOTHER OF MY LOVERS Happily no scandal--Rewarded for bearing children--$1250--for becoming a mother--Royal poverty--Bernhardt, the black sheep, in hot water again--The King rebukes me for taking his part 213 CHAPTER XLIII THE CROWN PRINCESS QUELLS A RIOT Asked to play the coward, and I refuse--A hostler who would die for a look from me--Hostler marriages in royal houses--Anecdotes and unknown facts concerning royal ladies and their offspring--Refuse police escort and rioters acclaim me--Whole royal family proud of my feat 219 CHAPTER XLIV THE NEW LOVER, AND "I PLAY THE HUSSY FOR FAIR" Who is that most exquisite _Vortänzer?_--A lovely boy--"Blush, good white paper"--I long for Henry--My eyes reflect love--"I must see you tonight.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,383   ~   ~   ~

He paws me over like a prize cow, and as the fourteenth Louis esteemed his mistress's chamber-women no more worthy of notice than her lap-dogs, so Frederick Augustus makes love _à la_ barracks before the Schoenberg, Countess von Minckwitz, or whatever other lady is in attendance.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,402   ~   ~   ~

CHAPTER XXVII PRINCE MAX MAKES LOVE TO ME Wants me to consult him on all spiritual matters--Warns me against the Kaiser, the heretic bishop--Princes as ill-mannered as Russian-Jew up-starts.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,444   ~   ~   ~

Like a true Oriental potentate, he wasted not a minute's time on the Queen and my sisters-in-law, but began making love to me as soon as he entered.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,535   ~   ~   ~

She was never pretty, never was made love to, never had admirers, legitimate or otherwise; she thus became impregnated with the fixed idea that to be fair and to be loved for one's fairness is frivolous, if not altogether reprehensible.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,826   ~   ~   ~

CHAPTER XXXVI COUNT BIELSK MAKES LOVE TO THE CROWN PRINCESS Fearless to indiscretion--He "thou's" me--Puts all his chances on one card--Proposes a rendezvous--Shall I go or shall I not go?--Peril if I go and peril if I don't.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,639   ~   ~   ~

He drank with Frederick Augustus, made love to Lucretia and squeezed the chambermaids on his floor to his heart's content.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,805   ~   ~   ~

"Well," said the other hoary-headed and infirm octogenarian, "I have no idea what you would do, but I am certain of this, that if I ever got the least bit touched, I would go and make love to the lasses at once."

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,157   ~   ~   ~

The attack was triple, but the artillery fire, on which Howe had counted, was at first valueless, because for the six-pounders had been sent over mostly nine-pound shot, thanks to the chief of artillery, who was afterward supposed to be making love to the schoolmaster's daughter.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,106   ~   ~   ~

But, unfortunately for the old gentleman's peace of mind while he _sculped_ the marble the artist likewise made love to the young lady and they ran away and were married, leaving the old gentleman nothing but the cold marble statue playing the marble harp, in place of a daughter.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 911   ~   ~   ~

I couldn't bear the thought of your making love to another woman."

~   ~   ~   Sentence 72   ~   ~   ~

A fated sisterhood is theirs, They sigh their souls out wistfully; No bee makes love to them or hears Their tender love a-telling.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 718   ~   ~   ~

Married, and above a hundred miles from his wife, and think that an objection to his making love to every woman he meets!

~   ~   ~   Sentence 887   ~   ~   ~

He is to make love to you.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 889   ~   ~   ~

Make love to me!-- JESSAMY.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 890   ~   ~   ~

Yes, Mistress Jenny, make love to you; and, I doubt not, when he shall become _domesticated_ in your kitchen, that this boor, under your auspices, will soon become _un amiable petit Jonathan_.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,744   ~   ~   ~

Why, Mary, you have not let this gentleman make love to you without my leave?

~   ~   ~   Sentence 358   ~   ~   ~

"If upon the impulse of the moment a man proceeds to make love, he generally does it up ship-shape; but if he, with malice aforethought, lays deliberate plans, he finds it the most awkward traverse to work in the world to follow them--but I did not know this.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 403   ~   ~   ~

There I was, making love according to the chart, and before I knew it, I'm high and dry ashore.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 490   ~   ~   ~

'You must know that I did it to punish him for making love so awkwardly.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 517   ~   ~   ~

Clara, dear, has Mr. Stewart discovered the way to make love _à la mode_?

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,620   ~   ~   ~

'Do you really love... sentence is part of a continuing quotation 14. page 144--typo '...make love à la modé?...' corrected to 'à la mode...' 15. page 144--typo 'wont' corrected to 'won't' 16. page 145--single quote added at start of sentence "What!' cried Clara... 17. page 145--double quotes changed to single in sentence "'Oh Pedro!" continued his sister... 18. page 146--corrected typo 'an' in sentence '...but to cut an run, and favored...' to 'and' 19. page 148--typo 'Giacoma' corrected to 'Giacomo' 20. page 158--typo 'hour's' in sentence '...only a few hour's drive from...' corrected to 'hours'' 21. page 158--colon at end of line 'At the sunny hour of noon:' changed to semi-colon 22. page 162--typo 'interpretaion' corrected to 'interpretation' 23. page 163--typo 'wtth' in sentence '...much, compared wtth its village-like...' corrected to 'with' 24. page 166--typos in sentence '...je sins un pr[=e]tre.' corrected to '...je suis un prêtre.'

~   ~   ~   Sentence 911   ~   ~   ~

"Well, the señor and myself are going to the school-room, and I will send her to you; but you must not make love to your cousin--she is very pretty, and you Americans have very sad morals;" and so saying, the lively superior led the way to the school-room, followed by Mr. Stowe.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,062   ~   ~   ~

Ellen made no answer, and I began to feel rather queer, and marvelously inclined to make love.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,089   ~   ~   ~

Langley was on his knees before the coquettish Mary, making love in his most grandiloquent style.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,114   ~   ~   ~

"Why," said Mary, "in that case you couldn't make love to me with any sort of propriety.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,423   ~   ~   ~

I only wish you could make love as well as you make verses.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,424   ~   ~   ~

COUNT.--And how should I make love?

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,727   ~   ~   ~

But, at any rate, there is quite enough to make her a great prize, and an object of admiration and attention to all the little men--not to the old hands, like White and Sumner; they are built up in their own conceit, and wouldn't marry Sam Weller's 'female marchioness,' unless she made love to them first, like one of Knowles's heroines.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 3,251   ~   ~   ~

One does not make love easily to a queen, the three hundred and eleventh of a proud line.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 277   ~   ~   ~

This was my promised wife to whom you have been making love, though, for delicacy would be superfluous, it is evident that she has not discouraged you.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 444   ~   ~   ~

Said he was a baronet or something, if he had his rights, and made love to Sally.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,801   ~   ~   ~

"I've known you to make love more ardently.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,801   ~   ~   ~

"I've known you to make love more ardently.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,803   ~   ~   ~

"I've known you to make love more ardently.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,801   ~   ~   ~

"I've known you to make love more ardently.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,981   ~   ~   ~

Just a very young, very silly goose of a girl, a little foreigner... some one to nickname and pet carelessly... a girl who had been good enough for Johnny Byrd to make love to but not good enough for him to marry... A girl who had thrown her name recklessly to the winds and who, to-morrow, would be a byword...

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,455   ~   ~   ~

"You make love to girls when you mean nothing by it--you get them lost in the woods and then refuse the marriage that any gentleman, even an indifferent gentleman, would offer!

~   ~   ~   Sentence 262   ~   ~   ~

Poor men, unfortunately, always make love better than those who are rich, because, having less to care about, and not being puffed up with their own consequence, they are not so selfish, and think much more of the lady than of themselves.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 168   ~   ~   ~

"I don't know," said she laughing, "he says that he has my father's permission to make love to me, and he seems determined that the permission shall not become a dead letter for want of use."

~   ~   ~   Sentence 189   ~   ~   ~

Every thing favored the mischievous plans of the seaman: Millinet never suspecting that any female but the mistress of the house would presume to seat herself in the front parlor, and feeling moreover the darkness and solitude of the room peculiarly favorable to courtship, seated himself by the side of the supposed Mary, and immediately commenced making love in pretty "rapid" style.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 939   ~   ~   ~

It may be so in some cases, but I doubt whether any man can make love so glibly, so off hand, before half a dozen spectators, especially females, as he can "all alone by himself;" on the other hand, there is something absolutely awful in being alone with a pretty and modest woman, and being compelled to "look one another in the face," like the two bullying kings of Judah and Jerusalem.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,584   ~   ~   ~

You made love to all of them, and got their confessions, and if your scruples and remorse kept you awake nights afterward, you certainly didn't show any effect of it.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 3,526   ~   ~   ~

"I would do much, anything that I could for Miss Lawton, but she would be the last to ask of me that I should lead a man on to--to make love to me, in order to betray him!

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,655   ~   ~   ~

So oaths mutually sworn, and invocations of Heaven, and priestly ceremonies, and fond belief, and love, so fond and faithful that it never doubted but that it should live for ever, are all of no avail towards making love eternal: it dies, in spite of the banns and the priest; and I have often thought there should be a visitation of the sick for it, and a funeral service, and an extreme unction, and an _abi in pace_.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,948   ~   ~   ~

"What, do you suppose that a sentimental widow, who will live down in that dingy dungeon of a Castlewood, where she spoils her boy, kills the poor with her drugs, has prayers twice a day and sees nobody but the chaplain-what do you suppose she can do, _mon cousin_, but let the horrid parson, with his great square toes, and hideous little green eyes, make love to her?

~   ~   ~   Sentence 5,457   ~   ~   ~

There was one comrade of Esmond's, an honest little Irish lieutenant of Handyside's, who owed so much money to a camp sutler, that he began to make love to the man's daughter, intending to pay his debt that way; and at the battle of Malplaquet, flying away from the debt and lady too, he rushed so desperately on the French lines, that he got his company; and came a captain out of the action, and had to marry the sutler's daughter after all, who brought him his cancelled debt to her father as poor Rogers's fortune.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 7,019   ~   ~   ~

Swift's lodgings in Bury Street, and who flattered him, and made love to him in such an outrageous manner-Vanessa was thrown over.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 10,866   ~   ~   ~

A female who is thus invested in whalebone is sufficiently secured against the approaches of an ill-bred fellow, who might as well think of Sir George Etheridge's way of making love in a tub as in the midst of so many hoops.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 225   ~   ~   ~

Hark, those two in the hazel coppice-- A boy and a girl, if the good fates please, Making love, say,-- The happier they!

~   ~   ~   Sentence 4,845   ~   ~   ~

He who in all his works below Adapted to the needs of man, Made love the basis of the plan,-- Did love, as was demonstrated: While man, who was so fit instead To hate, as every day gave proof,-- Man thought man, for his kind's behoof, Both could and did invent that scheme Of perfect love: 'twould well beseem Cain's nature thou wast wont to praise, Not tally with God's usual ways!"

~   ~   ~   Sentence 9,389   ~   ~   ~

Make love to her.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 10,198   ~   ~   ~

"Oh," Lydia wanted to call to him, "make love to her if you can.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,878   ~   ~   ~

But for thy persuasion and thy childish parchment, I should never have dreamed of making love to a ghost.'

~   ~   ~   Sentence 656   ~   ~   ~

We cannot allow men to play the parts of women, quarrelling, weeping, scolding, or boasting against the gods,-least of all when making love or in labour.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 555   ~   ~   ~

In like manner rhythm is compounded of elements short and long, once differing and now in accord; which accordance, as in the former instance, medicine, so in all these other cases, music implants, making love and unison to grow up among them; and thus music, too, is concerned with the principles of love in their application to harmony and rhythm.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 174   ~   ~   ~

In making love (as you will find one of these days) or in abusing a cab-man, your success will depend in no small degree in your choice of adjectives.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 3,722   ~   ~   ~

You cannot fight every day any more than you can make love every day.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 3,729   ~   ~   ~

Making love is more in their line this watch.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 3,732   ~   ~   ~

Eh, Dolly, lad," said I to him, "you could make love every day, couldn't you?"

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,174   ~   ~   ~

I should have to make love through an Inquisitor's hood, with its holes cut for the eyes-and even then the shape would show.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 3,489   ~   ~   ~

It had all happened long before he met her, and was no affair of hers.... That Sir Henry should make love to her was merely comic.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,806   ~   ~   ~

She loves you, and you not only made love to her yesterday afternoon; you played to her--I heard you--and I knew she would have to say 'Yes' to everything.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 4,147   ~   ~   ~

"The next morning M'sieur Camille had to go out, and I was alone in the studio when the Prince came in and tried to make love to me.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,380   ~   ~   ~

So they walked along the paths where Henry VIII made love to Anne Boleyn and Catharine Howard, where Queen Elizabeth took her morning walks, and where Pope, Swift, Addison, and Walpole wandered in more recent days.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,363   ~   ~   ~

Do you imagine a wife is going to stand quietly by and see her husband make love to her companion?"

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,368   ~   ~   ~

"You were making love to her, I tell you--you were telling her something which you had no business to reveal, and I swore then that her fate should be sealed this very night."

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,337   ~   ~   ~

"Well, Monsieur Correlli began to make love to me and to persecute me with his attentions soon after he came here.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,447   ~   ~   ~

Braving everything, I rushed over to him and denounced him for his treachery to me, also accusing him of making love to you."

~   ~   ~   Sentence 3,770   ~   ~   ~

When she would come to him secretly and make love to him, and say, 'Let us flee together, for we love each other,' he would refuse, saying that he was a slave, and the merchant would be very angry.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,561   ~   ~   ~

A boisterous, merry party of about seventy persons are assembled in front of a country ale-house; several are wildly dancing in a circle, others are drinking and shouting; others, again, are making love.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 816   ~   ~   ~

They're very soft-spoken when they come to make love; but it's only a bluff to make us give up our freedom.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,030   ~   ~   ~

It's my way of making love.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,533   ~   ~   ~

Under these pleasant circumstances, we converse and make love to our hearts' content.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,584   ~   ~   ~

After dwelling upon the enormity of the offence of making love without the approval of a parent, the writer exhorts me, by my 'mother,' and by other people whom I 'hold dear,' to return her letters, and all other evidence of the past, with the assurance that by so doing I shall accomplish one important step towards the 'termination of the sad story of this ill-begotten wooing' (para completar la triste historia de ese amor desgraciado).

~   ~   ~   Sentence 3,601   ~   ~   ~

Jem Bottles was still making love to a very pretty girl, some part of whose easy affection or interest he had won; and Paddy, it seems, had had a rip-roaring fight with two lackeys, worsted them with despatch, and even pursued them some distance.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 745   ~   ~   ~

Old Chrysostom, barred into his cave by an impassable line, was much more inquisitive about the princess asleep outside than if he had been a hearty young fellow free to go out and kiss and make love to her.

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