Paragraph
1 Note| representing actual persons in the~two or three thousand portraits
2 1 | the corners of which are two~other jewels not less curious:
3 1 | jewelry of the women. These two classes, and that of the~
4 1 | with~the rest of France by two roads only: that coming
5 1 | of~all alloy, possesses two thousand francs a year,
6 1 | reason that for~the last two hundred years they have
7 1 | The arch, supported by~two jambs, is of granite. The
8 1 | chase or war, three sabres, two game-bags, the utensils~
9 1 | staircase leading to the two upper~stories.~ ~The dining-room
10 1 | garlands of golden flowers. Two old~buffers face each other;
11 1 | embossed soup-tureen, and two salt-cellars, all of~silver;
12 1 | brocade.~ ~On each of the two upper stories of the house
13 1 | the house there are but two rooms.~The first is the
14 1 | received their friends in the two~rooms just described, in
15 2 | of the character of these two old~people (for the sister
16 2 | Saint-Louis, and a stipend~of two thousand francs a year.~ ~"
17 2 | of the~household.~ ~These two old persons brought out
18 2 | of the /casaquin/ issued two withered~but still vigorous
19 2 | had~noticed for the last two weeks, trying to explain
20 2 | the night, and gave the two fine~hunting-dogs their
21 2 | of the ancient house. The two dogs and the two horses
22 2 | house. The two dogs and the two horses were the~only remaining
23 2 | household.~ ~Though the two servants were accustomed
24 2 | by one, and Gasselin by two notes.~ ~Gasselin's greatest
25 3 | Madame or my sister"~ ~The two ladies here made a sign
26 3 | cassock, from which issued two stout shoes with silver
27 3 | find one or other of the two~apertures of her gown through
28 3 | change them only once in two weeks. These the abbe~brought
29 3 | Saint-Louis and a pension of two~thousand francs, as the
30 4 | solemnly planted on his two~heron-legs in the sunshine
31 4 | but it is well to have two~strings to your bow. In
32 5 | to inherit some property, two or~three thousand pounds
33 6 | town of Guerande, which for two months past had seen Calyste,
34 6 | the world now knows the two volumes of plays,~not intended
35 6 | Mademoiselle des Touches was two years old when her mother
36 6 | Felicite's aunt died of fear. Two of the sisters left France,
37 6 | and composed the music of two operas which have had~great
38 6 | her cousins, and driven~two lovers to despair, she returned
39 6 | this house is to-day worth two millions.~ ~Accustomed to
40 6 | them grace and strength,two qualities which are seldom~
41 6 | and straight, parts into two oblique nostrils, passionately~
42 6 | she~wrote the librettos of two operas. But she had no more
43 6 | success, she~published the two volumes of plays which at
44 6 | and~gardener, not less, in two years, than seventeen francs.~ ~
45 6 | revisit Les Touches for~two years, not until her return
46 7 | high pointed roof, with two gables and two large~dormer
47 7 | roof, with two gables and two large~dormer windows on
48 7 | which she enlivened by two~brick columns supporting
49 7 | On the floor above are two suites of rooms separated
50 7 | salon, a~large chamber, and two cabinets, one for a dressing-room,
51 7 | suite, she has made into two~separate apartments for
52 7 | Calyste see the vanes of the two gables shooting up~beyond
53 7 | world of Guerande, in the two systems brought face to
54 8 | who wished to marry his two daughters without~dowries
55 8 | and yet he feared her,~two causes for tyranny when
56 8 | of being~squeezed between two doors. You will see if I
57 8 | the man here in a day or two. He now knows that I~know
58 8 | himself I shouldn't be alive two seconds. I have never said
59 8 | There she has remained two years; she has written to
60 8 | to Croisic for the last two hours."~ ~"Not all the time,"
61 8 | Three Italian operas in two~years! You cannot say that
62 8 | themselves when~shared. These two years have been to me a
63 8 | money is bringing~these two bohemians back to Paris.
64 8 | forehead those hot tears fell, two~pearls of sorrowful motherhood, "
65 8 | youth had not mounted for two months. The three~women,
66 9 | Calyste presently saw two boats coming over from Croisic,
67 9 | Touches. He did, however, meet two~of them on the narrow causeway
68 9 | each~other every day, those two children will fall in love,
69 9 | next winter. If you say two words about it to Charlotte~
70 9 | between the sofa and the two ladies, Calyste heard the
71 9 | perfect antithesis.~These two women could never be rivals;
72 9 | Vignon's sarcasm had made the two~women pensive. Calyste was
73 9 | Calyste's arm, gave the other two men to~the marquise, and
74 9 | melancholy, the~farewell of two swans to life. When it was
75 10 | explanation~with her soon. Two minds as clear-sighted as
76 10 | deceive each other. Between two such professional duellists
77 10 | it; you have to do~with two extraordinary women, and
78 10 | the consequence of those two~qualitiesthey fatigue."~ ~"
79 10 | shield," said Claude, with two significant~inflections
80 10 | vulgar coarseness, to which two creatures as one angel fly
81 10 | and stood erect before the two men, subduing both with
82 10 | asked Calyste.~ ~"Four,two ladies and two gentlemen."~ ~"
83 10 | Four,two ladies and two gentlemen."~ ~"Then saddle
84 10 | handkerchiefs as a last adieu to two~passengers on the deck of
85 10 | My dear, one man to two widows is none too much,"
86 10 | a~street, following the two sisters in silence. In a
87 10 | she came in sight of the two~Parisian women, and suspected
88 10 | has not~seen her son for two years, and does not know
89 10 | only see~the faces of the two ladies on the front seat,
90 10 | gate to give his arm to the two ladies, and bid Camille
91 10 | life-long friends and the two elegant women, witty, accomplished,
92 11 | making~one's self beloved are two very different things. If
93 11 | had missed for the last two months. Charlotte attributed~
94 11 | Halga rubbed his hands. The two old~maids were as lively
95 11 | eleven o'clock. There were two defections, the~baron and
96 11 | There, my dear, are two spots whichas a certain
97 11 | made Camille~shudder.~ ~The two friends looked at each other
98 11 | preliminaries of a duel between two women,a duel without truce,
99 11 | Les Touches, and leave the two women forever.~ ~"Not go
100 11 | savage bitterness.~ ~The two women dropped upon a bench
101 12 | her maid with a louis or two~underneath it; for sooner
102 12 | yourself."~ ~"A louis or two!" exclaimed Calyste.~ ~He
103 12 | mind and she has goodness,two~qualities almost irreconcilable
104 12 | she is generous and~simple,two other grandeurs seldom found
105 12 | of uniting in one person two great glories.~ ~You, Calyste,
106 12 | aloud to her. And these two noble souls, so simple,
107 12 | than~to church, or on the two pretty roads selected as
108 12 | event so remarkable that two hours later, throughout
109 12 | divide himself between the two interests.~ ~"Chevalier,"
110 12 | have been mortgaged these two hundred~years, and so they
111 12 | and so they may remain for two hundred more; our farmers~
112 13 | and self-~approval.~ ~The two women were half-sitting,
113 13 | was going on between these~two women, each hiding from
114 13 | man, seem~insignificant. Two women observing each other
115 13 | hidden wrath of the past two years really acting upon
116 13 | by this scene between the two women calmed~down during
117 14 | s a /good/ lady."~ ~The two parties bowed and separated.~ ~"
118 14 | therefore the~landing of the two handsome ladies excited
119 14 | Gasselin put a distance of some two hundred~steps between himself
120 14 | excursion to Croisic, the two women were discoursing one~
121 14 | advice and stayed at home two whole days; but on the third
122 14 | so weakly.~ ~During his two days' absence, Beatrix had
123 14 | through the garden. As the two had said all to~each other
124 15 | the arbiter of the fate of two~women. In short, he will
125 15 | a few moments later, the two women were seated under
126 15 | are so~distrustful; those two will wonder how we can sit
127 16 | very~anxious. After about two weeks, during which time
128 16 | diseased about the lad. The two old maids and the rector,
129 16 | Calyste, Gasselin, and his two~fine dogs, he started for
130 16 | Guerande physician himself, for two of the best doctors in Nantes.~ ~
131 16 | eyes, from which rolled~two large tears which slowly
132 17 | speculators had given her two millions five hundred thousand~
133 17 | like her eldest~sister; two of the remaining sisters
134 17 | and in the rumble were two waiting-maids. The four
135 17 | heroine of the "Memoirs of two young~Married Women." Her
136 17 | Here I am, for the~last two days, in the depths of Brittany,
137 17 | others. They all, even~to the two servants, Gasselin and Mariotte (
138 17 | and sinople, on the latter two eagles argent. He means
139 18 | within our souls to see the two shared in the~making of
140 18 | end. Calyste, during his two years' residence in~Paris,
141 18 | interlude, he saw in one of the two proscenium boxes on his~
142 18 | Beatrix in public! The two thoughts flew through Calyste'
143 18 | Breton found Beatrix between two very~distinguished men,
144 18 | she said, as soon as the two~gentlemen had left the box,"
145 18 | stream flowing between the two~banks of the church and
146 18 | Calyste reached the hour of two o'clock living on one sentence
147 18 | the costs of a~journey of two thousand miles. He now went
148 18 | scarcely see on a mantel-shelf two cases~of old celadon, between
149 18 | possibly, for~women have two memories, that of angels
150 18 | would a mistress. I have two remarks to make to~you.
151 18 | without excusewe should be two fools"~ ~"My dear Beatrix,
152 19 | returned to his own house about two in the morning. After~waiting
153 19 | Opera by equal payments.~The two young women, Ursula and
154 19 | my God! my~God!"~ ~Those two words took the place of
155 19 | But Calyste has told me two lies. Do not pity me,~do
156 19 | Dommanget, the only one of the two men of science whom Calyste
157 19 | sin."~ ~She then told the two men the lies she had invented.
158 19 | greatness of the danger, and two heavy tears rolled~from
159 19 | Sabine, you are an angel!"~ ~Two days later the young wife
160 19 | tell his mistress the truth,two apprenticeships a man in~
161 19 | forced him to solicit for two hours; a pardon refused~
162 20 | blind.~ ~One morning, about two weeks after the first crisis,
163 20 | than actor or poet, the two most powerful of all natures,
164 20 | bitter as the Dead~Sea.~ ~ ~Two or three examples may serve
165 20 | Rochefide likes flowers."~ ~Two days later, the rooms of
166 20 | plates after~pecking at two or three mouthfuls.~ ~"Wasn'
167 21 | The next day, about two in the afternoon, one of
168 21 | sufferings which he~espoused. Two black eyes, ardent with
169 22 | our morals put between the two sexes in the same~situation.
170 22 | Anjou Saint-Honore, and of two~hundred thousand francs
171 22 | devote~himself to. So that two years after his desertion
172 22 | sixty~francs for one, and two hundred francs if you invite
173 22 | the~close of the month on two thousand five hundred francs
174 22 | March 1st. Arthur gained two hundred~thousand francs
175 22 | secretly a little fortune of two hundred thousand francs,
176 23 | plan. Jealous for the last two years of Madame du Bruel,~
177 23 | provincial, supplied with the two~handles by which women take
178 23 | outstrip~them by an inch or two, and the demigods to threaten
179 23 | one. My~future can go on two legs now."~ ~This queer
180 23 | the~Bois, for she now had two little carriages, drawn
181 23 | little carriages, drawn by two horses. In~the course of
182 24 | by his wife for at least two years; she must show him
183 25 | he found Finot and his two friends at table and~the
184 25 | with you, count."~ ~The two rivals in their own principality,
185 25 | laughing. "Don't go on your own two feet, have six; do as I~
186 25 | Well, this~evening."~ ~The two /roues/, the old and the
187 25 | to-night, will present you two days~hence at the house
188 25 | myself to make him give you two hundred thousand~francs."~ ~"
189 25 | first, three combs~gules, two and one, crossed by three
190 25 | purpure, leaved~vert, one and two; on the second, four feathers
191 25 | And she offers me only two hundred thousand! I want
192 25 | end of her sarcasms for two hours after~mid-day, in
193 25 | tropical regions of love. These two natures of woman, so opposed
194 26 | superb,~charming, left two ladies with whom he had
195 26 | a moment planted on his two legs as if they~were lead.
196 26 | thus begun, went on till two in the morning, without~
197 26 | chair like a worm cut in two, and actually rose three~
198 26 | brilliant witticism, leaving the two lovers to a~quarrel.~ ~Thus,
199 26 | and it breaks my heart."~ ~Two days later, as they met
200 26 | sort of preparation."~ ~The two conspirators entered the
201 26 | found Rochefide~aged by two years; he had not even put
202 26 | woman in heart, upon whom two passions had fallen; but
203 26 | their own eyes to put~out two of their enemy. La Schontz,
204 26 | playing the fable~of 'The Two Pigeons,' that is all."~ ~
205 Add | Constant-Cyr-Melchior, Baron de~Letters of Two Brides~A Distinguished Provincial
206 Add | Courtesan's Life~Letters of Two Brides~Another Study of
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