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Alphabetical    [«  »]
guards 1
guenic 97
guenics 23
guerande 109
guerilla 2
guerillas 1
guerin 1
Frequency    [«  »]
112 whom
111 then
109 day
109 guerande
109 himself
109 well
108 wife
Honoré de Balzac
Beatrix

IntraText - Concordances

guerande

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1 1 | likeness of~the feudal ages is Guerande. The name alone awakens 2 1 | There~are no towns after Guerande except Vitre in the centre 3 1 | form of the middle ages.~ ~Guerande is still encircled with 4 1 | the Revolution of 1830, Guerande is still a~town apart, essentially 5 1 | throughout~Brittany the Guerande salt, to which many Bretons 6 1 | between this village and Guerande is a~distance of eighteen 7 1 | from the rest of France.~Guerande, therefore, being at the 8 1 | which communicates~with Guerande over quicksands, which efface 9 1 | demolished. If you reach Guerande from Croisic, after crossing 10 1 | in their burrows.~ ~Thus Guerande bears no resemblance to 11 1 | letters from Saint-Nazaire~to Guerande and /vice versa/. Bernus, 12 1 | arrival~of a carriage in Guerande, that of a lady or some 13 1 | circuit ten miles round, Guerande is always GUERANDE,the~illustrious 14 1 | round, Guerande is always GUERANDE,the~illustrious town where 15 1 | who buy them they~are from Guerande and nowhere else. All artists, 16 1 | certain~bourgeois, who come to Guerande feel, as they do at Venice, 17 1 | heart.~ ~Near the church of Guerande stands a mansion which is 18 1 | francs a year, its mansion in~Guerande, and the little castle of 19 1 | were it known there~is to Guerande the whole of Brittany. In 20 1 | the whole of Brittany. In Guerande the Baron du~Guaisnic is 21 1 | you may see it still at Guerande: Gules, a hand proper~gonfaloned 22 1 | present family!~ ~If you go to Guerande after reading this history 23 1 | balcony and gazing over~Guerande at the sunshine, where it 24 2 | Guenic had started from Guerande the moment that La~Vendee 25 2 | captured,~he returned to Guerande, and from Guerande went 26 2 | returned to Guerande, and from Guerande went to Croisic, whence 27 2 | England.~ ~The people of Guerande feigned utter ignorance 28 2 | Monsieur du Guenic returned to~Guerande in 1813, as quietly and 29 2 | 1814), brought his wife to Guerande, where she gave him~Calyste 30 2 | when a court reigned~at Guerande.~ ~Monsieur du Guenic was 31 2 | 1814,~when the rector of Guerande suggested to the baron that 32 2 | baron sustained a siege~at Guerande against the forces of General 33 2 | restoration of the Bourbons. Guerande~still treasures the memory 34 2 | returned to the house in Guerande, they took their friends~ 35 2 | less money there than at Guerande.~ ~Thus no household was 36 3 | Grimont as he marched through Guerande, the most~irreligious of 37 3 | Florence silk~bought at Guerande, and an old bonnet-shape, 38 3 | Pen-Hoels and of the parish of~Guerande, to the mother of Henri 39 3 | freshen the atmosphere of Guerande. He always went armed with 40 3 | Louis XVIII. he returned to~Guerande, and became, after a while, 41 3 | were still at that point in Guerande.~ ~ ~ ~ 42 4 | capital than any person in Guerande spent in the course of~any 43 4 | Perhaps his fossil life at~Guerande hid many memories. When 44 4 | the sadness of the king of~Guerande; and after they had left 45 4 | her house in the Place de Guerande, making~remarks as they 46 4 | evening the hubbub excited in~Guerande homes by the arrival, the 47 4 | the whole~year round in Guerande. The Demoiselles Bougniol 48 4 | replied the rector. "All Guerande is turned upside down about~ 49 5 | of him~to the rector of Guerande, she was certain that no 50 6 | CAMILLE MAUPIN~The town of Guerande, which for two months past 51 6 | the excellent rector of Guerande. The Breton des Touches~ 52 6 | sent her man of business to Guerande and took a~lodging for herself 53 6 | Paris. The little town~of Guerande was by this time roused 54 6 | Savenay, as well as from Guerande. This public~curiosity brought 55 6 | It was some time~before Guerande became aware of her presence. 56 6 | had made some progress in Guerande, and~several persons knew 57 6 | never be comprehended in Guerande; in~fact, to every mind, 58 7 | A few hundred yards from Guerande the soil of Brittany comes 59 7 | the road from Croisic to Guerande turns off from~the main 60 7 | to the sea,~easterly on Guerande. One facade of the house 61 7 | house looks on the road to~Guerande, the other on the desert 62 7 | the estate is really in Guerande) derives an income~from 63 7 | the flowery meadows around Guerande. Her soul was~struggling 64 7 | the air seemed lighter; Guerande was a prison to him; his 65 7 | and~patriarchal world of Guerande, in the two systems brought 66 8 | from the age we live in as Guerande is from Paris. She has been,~ 67 8 | secrets, about~which no one in Guerande knows anything at all. She 68 8 | is but one such woman in Guerande, and it is you, my mother! 69 8 | brought to~the very doors of Guerande. Mariotte endeavored to 70 9 | separates the landing-place of Guerande from Croisic; the~weather 71 9 | is this really the way to Guerande?"~ ~"Yes," he replied, " 72 9 | Calyste started toward Guerande with the lightness and agility 73 9 | his way rather~sulkily to Guerande, where he finished his excursion 74 10| Calyste returned to Guerande with lagging steps, turning 75 10| of more civilization than Guerande,~Camille was read and admired; 76 10| gravely. "I was born at~Guerande."~ ~Calyste could not help 77 10| the marquise drove through Guerande with the viscountess~and 78 10| had intrepidly returned to Guerande on~the back of a hired horse), 79 11| As Calyste walked back to Guerande, his soul was full~of Beatrix; 80 12| for myself on the jetty of Guerande,~when I read on the shores 81 12| through the chief street of~Guerande for the purpose of meeting 82 12| between Les Touches and~ ~Guerande, is rather absurd.~ ~Beatrix 83 12| Baronne du Guenic walking in Guerande elsewhere than~to church, 84 12| Charlotte. "I ought to leave Guerande and return to Nantes."~ ~ 85 13| striking on the steeple of Guerande as Calyste entered~his own 86 14| wanted to see the marshes of Guerande once more~before I die," 87 14| passage from the jetty~of Guerande to the extreme end of the 88 14| they~reached the jetty at Guerande, whence she was carried 89 14| Camille. The doctor from Guerande had~assured them that on 90 14| which opens on the road to Guerande. When Camille found her~ 91 15| time Calyste had reached Guerande, the servants were packing~ 92 15| Madame de Rochefide to see~Guerande, its towers, whitened by 93 16| himself~along the road from Guerande to the spot where he had 94 16| requested the rector of Guerande to come and see her. The~ 95 16| They sent at last for the Guerande physician, who broke the 96 16| send, at the request of~the Guerande physician himself, for two 97 16| that he still lived on. The Guerande doctor~calmly told the baroness 98 16| approaching end became known in Guerande,~a crowd gathered in the 99 17| mind~and temperament.~ ~Guerande, April, 1838.~ ~To Madame 100 17| BrittanyAdieu.~ ~Your Sabine.~ ~ ~Guerande, May, 1838.~ ~I take up 101 17| When I saw the towers of Guerande rising in the distance, 102 17| tyrannizes a trifle over her.~ ~Guerande, May 15th.~ ~Up to the present 103 17| uneasiness.~ ~"Do you return to Guerande?" she asked me.~ ~"Yes," 104 17| even the birth of a son at Guerande, in~1839, to the great joy 105 18| THE END OF A HONEY-MOON~Guerande, July, 1838.~ ~To Madame 106 18| me sometimes to fly from Guerande~and those sands of Croisic.~ ~ 107 18| then as you loved me at~Guerande. Write: /I dine out; do 108 19| She directed the letter to Guerande and gave it to the footman 109 20| this terrible letter:~ ~Guerande.~ ~To Madame la Baronne


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