It was all he needed to infatuate Vitoria de Guimaraes, who had just finished sixth in the country's elite division. |
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Her 'cardboard lover,' whose heart is lost at first sight of Simone, describes her personality, with the licence of the infatuate, as compact of the various charms of the Mona Lisa, Cleopatra, and Helen of Troy. |
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Otherwise, why would the life and fate of a 30-year-old poet who committed suicide so infatuate that the scholarly and quasi-scholarly examinations of her work have been turned into a cottage industry? |
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I declare the girl seems quite to infatuate the men, and see if trouble does not come of it. |
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There was never wicked man that was not infatuate, and in nothing more than in those things wherein he hoped most to transcend the reach of others. |
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