Paragraph
1 1 | present family!~ ~If you go to Guerande after reading
2 2 | the baron that he should go~to Paris and claim his recompense
3 3 | need of him.~ ~"You can go out, or go to bed, after
4 3 | him.~ ~"You can go out, or go to bed, after prayers,"
5 4 | pain~of seeing the game go on without him. But, as
6 4 | his~master soon. I shall go next."~ ~"My dear, my dear!"
7 4 | would let his old father~go to the field without him."~ ~"
8 5 | You are tired, dear child; go to bed," she said, repressing
9 5 | picked up the paper. "I will go and see~her myself," added
10 7 | his professed~desire to go to Croisic and see the rocks
11 8 | know~what I mean when you go there. People said to Rochefide: '
12 8 | reconstruct itself, was about to~go to pieces, bit by bit, under
13 8 | time roll~by, and does not go to work. Like Etienne Lousteau
14 8 | rose.~ ~"Why should you go so soon? You are certainly
15 8 | land journey that I shall go to Croisic~by water. This
16 9 | for dinner. You had better go and find~Mademoiselle des
17 9 | which he went.~ ~"Shall I go in, or shall I not?" he
18 9 | as a~sister.~ ~He did not go home till five in the afternoon.
19 10| for us to make it? I~shall go and see her."~ ~"I assure
20 10| more than thirty miles to go."~ ~Calyste started with
21 10| she exclaimed eagerly.~ ~"Go and offer them seats in
22 10| luggage, if you have any, can go behind the~carriage; I have
23 10| family on this~occasion, and go up as usual to Les Touches,
24 10| late to do so now. Calyste, go up to Les Touches and arrange
25 11| different things. If you go your own~way you will fall
26 11| not restrain her~tears.~ ~"Go now," she said, "my child;
27 11| Beatrix, who~had heard him go, returned to Camille, whom
28 11| two women forever.~ ~"Not go to Les Touches!" he cried.~ ~"
29 11| cried.~ ~"Oh! yes, yes, go! do not look so, my darling!"
30 11| One morning he resolved to go to Les Touches at an earlier
31 11| Camille rose.~ ~"I will go and hasten breakfast; my
32 12| that excursion? We shall~go together to Croisic and
33 12| and to Batz? If you do not go I shall take~it for an answer,
34 12| Camille is free; she can go and~come as she will; I
35 12| evil suggests. But I will go still further.~ ~Were I
36 12| to leap a barrier, they go up to~reconnoitre it, and
37 12| you! Let us fly! let us go into some country where
38 12| one. Ah, Beatrix, let us~go! A boat, a few sailors,
39 13| a young man. She did not go so far as to wish~herself
40 13| Then you really intend to go, my dear?" said Camille,~
41 13| said to him very gravely. "Go, now, and make your preparations
42 13| storm. When~the time to go upstairs came, Camille offered
43 13| to~the footman, "You may go,"a brief sentence, which
44 13| to-morrow."~ ~"No, do not go; he loves you, I see that.
45 13| again.~ ~"Do you intend to go to Croisic to-morrow," she
46 14| caryatides.~These women go barefooted with very short
47 14| young master.~ ~"You must go to Croisic and fetch a ladder,"
48 14| draught, my dear friend, and go to sleep."~ ~That night,
49 14| least, ill-treated.~ ~"They go to work like La Fontaine,
50 14| by expressing a wish to go again to that rock~where
51 14| nearly perished.~ ~"Will you go with me alone?" asked Calyste,
52 15| good part.~ ~"Come, let us go upstairs," said the latter. "
53 15| he asked permission to go into Beatrix's~bedroom,
54 16| asleep. "I do not wish to go out of this world~without
55 16| October the sick lad ceased to go even to the mall~in search
56 16| day when Calyste ceased to go even to Les Touches,~Felicite
57 16| Calyste, springing up, "I will go."~ ~"He will live," said
58 16| they met, "I want~you to go to Paris with me. We will
59 16| his features.~ ~"Let us go," he said.~ ~"We shall save
60 17| Yes," I said.~ ~"Never go to Les Touches. I did wrong
61 18| among those of your palace; go everywhere,~enjoy everything,
62 18| Touches!" to make us~eager to go there hot-foot, our eyes
63 18| Why did she forbid me to go to Les Touches? What sort
64 18| Should you like to go to Les Touches?" asked my
65 18| understand why you do not go to Les~Touches, and I think
66 18| of the place?"~ ~"Let us go there," he replied.~ ~So
67 18| earnestly forbidden me to go. Poisonous flowers are all
68 18| Touches, and never will I go back~there again.~ ~The
69 18| 25th.~ ~I am determined to go and live in the ruins of
70 18| I am sure,~allow me to go and say a word to d'Arthez,
71 18| said Calyste, "where can I go to see you?"~ ~"I am hidden
72 18| mania of literary women! Now go, leave me; I must not allow~
73 18| being afoot, and free to go by~the Pont Louis XVI. and
74 18| truth, your wife will never go wrong;~she's a big boy who
75 18| his hat to~depart.~ ~"Yes, go, my poor friend," she said; "
76 18| very marrow~of his bones. "Go,you had better go and dine
77 18| bones. "Go,you had better go and dine with her."~ ~"/
78 18| their treatment of women. Go, monsieur, go and~dine with
79 18| of women. Go, monsieur, go and~dine with your dear
80 19| did Savinien and Calyste go after they dined with you~
81 19| the viscountess.~ ~"Let us go to her!" cried the duchess.~ ~
82 19| from their wives, and~they go to the club and play. But
83 20| said suddenly; "I shall go to the Opera."~ ~She dressed
84 20| she~could think he did not go to the rue de Chartres!
85 20| years~old."~ ~She refused to go to the Opera as she intended,
86 21| dears, it is midnight; come, go to bed," she said to Clotilde
87 21| it is a force.~ ~"Come, go home, dear sufferer. In
88 23| that one. My~future can go on two legs now."~ ~This
89 24| proposed to him after~dinner to go and play dummy whist with
90 24| of what she asks. Let us go to~the Jockey Club; Rochefide
91 25| forget my creditors and go and pass my life in~Venice,
92 25| spirit than boldness; you can go far,~and make yourself a
93 25| Maxime, laughing. "Don't go on your own two feet, have
94 25| infamies to you? No, you must go, and dazzle,~and conquer.
95 25| innkeeper of~literature, to go into a convent?" cried Maxime. "
96 25| decide himif he is drunk. Go and see where they~all are."~ ~"
97 25| It is not worth while to go; I hear no one but Bixiou,
98 25| his eyes shut."~ ~"Let us go back, then."~ ~"/Ah ca!/"
99 25| understanding, my~Fabien, you must go; it is one o'clock."~ ~This
100 25| matter with you, dearest?"~ ~"Go and find your great scarecrow
101 25| advised her "faithless one" to go without~her to the Opera,
102 25| entered the room.~ ~"Did you go to the Ambigu, my little
103 25| when Calyste~was obliged to go to a party with his wife.~ ~
104 26| Well," cried Maxime, "go on; what happened? Was Arthur
105 26| would die on the spot.~Come, go away, Maxime. I must put
106 26| Didn't I advise you to go and sup with Antonia?"~ ~"
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