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Alphabetical    [«  »]
daughter 43
daughters 13
dawn 4
day 109
daylight 1
days 71
daysi 1
Frequency    [«  »]
113 sabine
112 whom
111 then
109 day
109 guerande
109 himself
109 well
Honoré de Balzac
Beatrix

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day

    Paragraph
1 1 | little of the~clothing of the day; and that little the inhabitants 2 1 | night the~tracks made by day, and also by boats which 3 1 | not renewed in the present~day. Because to-day mansions 4 2 | him~Calyste on the very day that Louis XVIII. landed 5 2 | clock on the evening of the day on which this history~begins, 6 3 | the Russian navy until~the day when the Emperor Alexander 7 4 | in the course of~any one day. Consequently Mademoiselle 8 4 | he slept?" And the next day the whole town would talk 9 4 | atheists of the present day scoff at holy things,~Calyste 10 5 | maternal jealousy were~wasted. Day after day, Calyste's visits 11 5 | jealousy were~wasted. Day after day, Calyste's visits to Les 12 5 | later. The night before the day~of which we speak it was 13 5 | by this woman.~ ~The next day Calyste slept till mid-day, 14 6 | career has need to be in our day. Her prodigious reading~ 15 6 | eminent musicians of our day; but this circumstance belongs 16 6 | influences? Science may some day find the reason of this~ 17 6 | has that~skin, olive by day and dazzling by candlelight, 18 7 | entirely of the present day, presents, in contrast with 19 8 | causes for tyranny when the day came on which the marquise 20 8 | Casteran, and he forgot me in a day. I then gave myself~the 21 8 | shall see the man here in a day or two. He now knows that 22 8 | husband and started the next~day for Italy. There she has 23 9 | they see each~other every day, those two children will 24 9 | du Guenic during the one~day that I spend at Les Touches."~ ~" 25 10| he answered.~ ~The next day, Calyste told Gasselin to 26 10| to make on the following day.~ ~Fanny, who alone saw 27 11| francs, marching night and day."~ ~"Calyste," said Mademoiselle 28 11| Camille. "Come here every day and devote yourself~to me. 29 11| the short moment of the day~during which he was allowed 30 11| authors, spend four hours a day in reading their~romances."~ ~" 31 11| should make, on the next day but one, an~excursion into 32 12| much~while thinking of you day and night that I have penetrated 33 12| heart; yet I forgot her in a~day, in a moment, when I saw 34 12| that does not grow from day to day, from hour to hour, 35 12| does not grow from day to day, from hour to hour, is a 36 12| behaved to her after the day she told me, on her~return 37 12| interpreting to you the other day, "Senza brama sicura ricchezza,"~ 38 12| kept close to the wind that~day whenOh!" he cried, interrupting 39 12| who loves you, might some day follow us. Ireland is full 40 12| anew to me! Give me this day of~happiness; and that passing 41 13| excursion on the following day.~ ~"Then you really intend 42 13| love lies~twenty times a day; its deceptions only prove 43 14| them that on the following day a little stiffness would 44 14| Mademoiselle des Touches one day.~ ~Before the excursion 45 14| a pass that he went one day to Camille~imploring her 46 14| love.~ ~Nevertheless the day came when the Breton, driven 47 14| you~feel my comprehension day by day."~ ~She listened 48 14| my comprehension day by day."~ ~She listened to such 49 14| security."~ ~It was a glorious day for Calyste when, arriving 50 14| had worn on the memorable~day of their first excursion. 51 14| his juvenile act on the day of~her arrival.~ ~"I knew 52 14| could be said, and as their day's excursion, so filled~with 53 15| every moment, confirmed from day~to day. The morrow justifies 54 15| moment, confirmed from day~to day. The morrow justifies the 55 15| you~brought him back a day too soon, or a day too late. 56 15| back a day too soon, or a day too late. I recognize your~ 57 15| the spot from which, the day before, he had seen Beatrix~ 58 15| a course, sat there all day in a state of~complete torpidity. 59 15| Here, in this room, the~day before Beatrix came here, 60 16| the chevalier.~ ~The next day Calyste saw Charlotte, as 61 16| rocks at Croisic since the day that~temptation became almost 62 16| he envied. But now, from~day to day, he grew morose; 63 16| envied. But now, from~day to day, he grew morose; he seemed 64 16| to the baroness, on the day he~became convinced that 65 16| companionship.~ ~Soon after the day when Calyste ceased to go 66 16| out."~ ~"Let me know the day when she sets foot in this 67 16| of fatal stupor. On the day when the family put on their~ 68 16| not reveal. But on this day, while~mother and son still 69 17| of a happy home.~ ~On the day when the Grandlieu family 70 17| to take~part in.~ ~On the day when you stand before the 71 17| young~women of the present day, who, under pretext of living 72 17| young women of the present day?~ ~When Calyste and I were 73 17| my Odyssey. On the third day your children no longer~ 74 17| impossible may~exist. Some day, when we are alone together, 75 17| Nantes.~ ~But oh! what a day was that when we arrived 76 18| how it was that I said one day, with an~unconcerned little 77 18| me; so I said to him one day: "What are you afraid of 78 18| and sometimes during the~day, Sabine would ask him, " 79 19| of danger, and the~next day Calyste was at Madame de 80 19| of your wife on the very day after my fall!" she~cried. " 81 19| the triumph of the first day on all~succeeding days. 82 19| nothings, the trifles of the day, she carried to excess.~ 83 20| possible, the future~of his day. With what restrained fury 84 20| perfumes of memory.~ ~One day Calyste looked about him 85 21| made to~feel on that first day the bitterness of a retrospective 86 21| retrospective adultery!"~ ~The next day, about two in the afternoon, 87 22| to a thousand francs a day. To a gentleman endowed 88 22| experience is~taught,on a certain day of extreme misery, when, 89 22| Madame Schontz forty francs a day for his dinner and~that 90 22| said Gobenheim to her one~day.~ ~"Water is so dear," she 91 23| portion of the~youth of the day. The digression is history.~ ~ 92 23| unduly developed in our day, has necessarily~developed 93 23| Accordingly the next day she took the Heir in her / 94 24| well revenged."~ ~The next day Rochefide told Madame Schontz 95 25| PRINCE OF BOHEMIA~The next day, when Maxime de Trailles 96 25| least, in the course of the day. Accordingly,~at the end 97 25| of the partners. The next day when Arthur awoke he found 98 25| wife, to start the next day for~Italy, and live as a 99 26| FONTAINE'S FABLES~The next day Calyste seemed to Beatrix 100 26| spite of the fatigue of this day (the day when a woman is 101 26| fatigue of this day (the day when a woman is bored by~ 102 26| Madame de Rochefide. The next~day, learning the success of 103 26| Conti or Calyste.~ ~The next day, at the hour when La Palferine 104 26| week Calyste went every day to Madame de Rochefide's~ 105 26| Palferine.~ ~On the ninth day Calyste received a line 106 26| been seeking me since the day when I looked at you from 107 26| looked at me on the previous day. I thought~I had better 108 26| health, and~expected some day to see herself marquise; 109 26| hotel du Guenic early in the day and found Calyste in his~


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