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1 1 | animated by that great~thought of Art, which in those old
2 1 | Croisic for sea-bathing (thought to have greater virtue among
3 1 | careless of the great~Catholic thought, give four leaves to clover,
4 1 | was built men worked, or~thought they worked, for a family
5 1 | fail of it. Such was the~thought of our immediate grandfathers,
6 2 | nature alone is visible. Thought~was rare. It seemed to be
7 2 | allowed him to~dispense with thought. His duty, life had taught
8 2 | Institutions and~religion thought for him. He reserved his
9 2 | other persons. He drew his thought from his heart like his
10 2 | could not have found one thought of personal interest. In
11 2 | beggar?"~ ~"It would be thought I served a king from interest,"
12 2 | age, many a man would~have thought it happiness to marry her
13 3 | key-stone of the arch.~ ~"I thought that Mademoiselle de Pen-Hoel
14 3 | to~Paris she would have thought him dissipated, and declared
15 3 | her~principles. She was thought to be maliciously clever,
16 5 | was aware of what she had thought was known to her~alone.
17 5 | rapidity of one absorbed in thought while engaged in manual~
18 5 | no impure word, no~evil thought had sullied the ears or
19 5 | only listen to wisdom, she thought,~the coming generation of
20 5 | Will he stay there?" she thought. "It would be the first
21 5 | beautiful pure cheeks," thought his mother, "where the rich~ ~
22 5 | an infant!"~ ~This bitter thought wrung Fanny's heart and
23 6 | conceived everything by~thought, but abstained from deed.
24 6 | herself~with the ways of thought and action which are held
25 6 | of it was wholly that of thought;~she judged it in its causes
26 6 | forty she~might have been thought no more than twenty-five.~ ~
27 6 | without personal after-~thought, or, at any rate, he concealed
28 6 | and the softer terms of thought that are natural to a woman.~
29 6 | Some~delicate minds have thought it lay in a feminine desire
30 7 | grand thing~to him before he thought of her as a woman, and it
31 7 | longer heard it. Camille, he thought, must be playing on a small~
32 7 | cushions,~her eyes, stupid with thought, fixed on a pattern of the
33 7 | extent of soul which the thought of the spectator~extends
34 8 | murderous the~seventh. He thought he was deceiving his wife,
35 8 | society. In those~days I thought her consumed with a desire
36 8 | from the height of her own thought.~Her mind was busy. These
37 8 | way she behaved to me. She thought me a woman who was likely
38 8 | I call the cowardice of thought.~My friend, all this was
39 8 | arithmetic of his inmost thought. But enough; let~us leave
40 8 | comprehension. He scrutinizes the thought of every one, yet without~
41 8 | wholly in action, not in~thought; there are traces of an
42 8 | the weight of a world of thought. Such long, tall bodies
43 8 | courtesan, his powers of thought~remain untouched. Yet his
44 8 | all, to comprehend all by~thought, he despises materialities;
45 8 | she observed. A~dreadful thought oppressed him; he fancied
46 8 | told him, of the tricks of~thought of the jesters of the press,
47 8 | Ah! she loves, too!" thought Calyste, folding the letter
48 9 | in, or shall I not?" he thought when the pines of Les~Touches
49 9 | felt repugnance at the very thought of her. Calyste was quite~
50 9 | his sentiments, all~his thought now belonged to the marquise.
51 9 | of his childhood, whom he thought of as a~sister.~ ~He did
52 9 | Felicite laugh.~ ~"Ah!" thought Calyste, "how far such a
53 10| despairing and undecided, lost in thought. He sought in vain for the~
54 10| you were horrified at the thought of the~consequences of such
55 10| glorious poem soon. You thought of~'Adolphe,' that dreadful
56 10| easily deceive him. You~thought me simple and easy to mislead
57 10| what I hoped to share; I thought I held in~you a key to that
58 10| moment of her life.~ ~"We thought you gone, Calyste," said
59 10| replied the baroness.~ ~"I thought perhaps he was going to
60 10| Gasselin.~ ~"I am lost!" thought Calyste; "they will meet
61 10| approached Camille.~ ~"I thought," said the young man, "that
62 10| read and admired; she was thought to be the muse of~Brittany
63 10| the will? I shouldn't have thought it.~Which of your compositions
64 10| continued Charlotte, who thought~herself insulted by such
65 10| friendship.~ ~"Quite true," thought Calyste to himself as the
66 11| climbed to a rock which I thought inaccessible,~I will at
67 11| enchanted to deceive me," thought Camille, as she kissed~her
68 11| took offence at what she thought~Camille's distrust; she
69 11| her. Calyste~had but one thought; Beatrix was always before
70 11| a constant absorption in thought, made Calyste~almost doltish.
71 12| something between them," thought Mademoiselle des Touches.~ ~
72 12| me of marrying! the very thought convulses my heart.~Is there
73 13| in the sentiment, but she thought it heroism on her~part to
74 13| as the Italians say. She thought she~was equalling Camille'
75 13| has committed some folly," thought Camille, perceiving in~each
76 13| an agreement together," thought Camille, who caught the~
77 13| Under the pressure of that thought a horrible discomposure
78 13| her a letter?"~ ~But she thought the innocent Breton incapable
79 13| woman like Beatrix this thought came like a thunder-clap.
80 14| milkmaid.~ ~"She has no heart," thought the baroness.~ ~"Mademoiselle,"
81 14| baroness.~ ~"That one," thought Fanny, "really loves my
82 14| projection, and was lost in~thought. What could a woman like
83 14| sometimes open vast depths of~thought, decided her to take the
84 14| and as she~did so, the thought crossed her mind that the
85 14| future of holiness. The thought~filled her mind. How petty
86 14| what? Ah! who would have thought it?~with the bounteous mother,
87 14| be~praying; in fact, she thought she was about to die, for
88 14| you reason to~suppose I thought you dangerous. Alas! as
89 14| opens on the dunes. Beatrix thought~the sands delightful; she
90 15| emotions. Strong in the thought that~Beatrix loved him,
91 15| injustice, or you might have thought me jealous. I wanted you
92 16| baron, whom the~others had thought asleep. "I do not wish to
93 16| Many a time I have thought of flying there"~ ~"Ah!"
94 16| her coffin. I have often thought of going there~to fetch
95 16| he took pleasure in~the thought of death. He no longer left
96 16| sunshine,~alone with his one thought, and avoiding all companionship.~ ~
97 16| weakness, though none of them~thought him in danger; how could
98 16| dying, he trembled at the thought that his race was about
99 17| and for yours without one~thought or wish except for your
100 17| now that I have risen in~thought above all petty earthly
101 17| and how precious is the~thought of DOING (as your noble
102 17| place in your hands. I have thought more of your children~and
103 17| under the weight of the same thought,~ ~"She is launched upon
104 17| they are greater than you thought. Ah! my dear~mother, what
105 17| des Touches, and you had thought it right to tell me~the
106 17| her conversion, which was thought to be his doing, has led
107 18| thoughtful, but at first I thought that I~had vanquished the
108 18| flowers.~Suddenly a horrible thought rode full tilt through my
109 18| in the German ballad. I thought I saw that~Calyste's love
110 18| her? That's the solitary thought which echoes~through my
111 18| husband and wife. Sabine thought of a love marriage where~
112 18| sense of loyalty, the first thought of Sabine's husband was
113 18| shall make a sonnet on that thought," replied Canalis at the
114 18| lost a friendship which I~thought was Breton. Alas! we can
115 18| soul in that way," was the thought~that assailed him in the
116 18| tinted with the~dominant thought,they love or they do not
117 18| vicissitudes, her penury, as she~thought it, would have been opulence
118 18| which left upon Eve his last~thought after he had created her."~ ~
119 19| he~rose to leave her. He thought he had been there only half
120 19| hours."~ ~"Well, well," thought Calyste, who was making
121 19| I must save her!" she thought to herself. "Trust me, Sabine,"
122 19| later the young wife was thought to be out of danger, and
123 20| Flowers."~ ~"Ah!" she thought to herself, "Madame de Rochefide
124 21| eyes of~some men youth is thought an inferiority. There is
125 21| given vent to the deepest thought in~her heart; she had no
126 21| your indulgence; but~the thought has occurred to me that
127 21| should~ensue"~ ~"You have thought wisely, Madame la duchesse;
128 21| by another,this is what I~thought at my /prie-Dieu/ after
129 22| husband, he was pitied; people thought Beatrix inexcusable for~
130 23| certainly not Rochefide, who thought she had a penchant for the
131 23| for wits; wits want to be thought men of~talent; men of talent
132 24| time of Francois I., who thought proper to~ennoble the valet
133 24| Madame Schontz~herself thought as much of her toilet as
134 25| his~one-horse equipage, he thought to himself: "Madame d'Espard
135 25| feather in my cap!"~ ~"I never thought of it," replied the marquis; "
136 25| Madame Schontz' waist, "I thought you loved me!"~ ~"Well?"~ ~"
137 25| without one look or one thought being~turned away from me.
138 25| manner. Poor Couture, who thought himself sure of~wealth and
139 26| trembled with fear at the thought of a possible~meeting between
140 26| if we may so call it. She thought~herself delivered from Calyste,
141 26| me on the previous day. I thought~I had better ignore all
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