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1 1 | vegetate.~ ~For the last thirty years, however, these pictures
2 1 | cotton factories. A few more years and even~these old cities
3 1 | been converted one hundred years earlier into a mall where
4 1 | what they were four hundred years ago,with one~exception;
5 1 | for~the last two hundred years they have been unable to
6 1 | family. For the last~fifty years the du Guaisnics have received
7 2 | the whole course of twenty years not a single indiscreet~
8 2 | Breton, despite~his fifty years, had fallen in love with
9 2 | Brien was then twenty-one years old. The Baron du~Guenic
10 2 | the old Chouan, had, some years previously, a return~of
11 2 | sooner was Calyste sixteen years of age than his~father accompanied
12 2 | Breton~character. In forty years no one ever heard a word
13 2 | Beautiful still at forty-two years of age, many a man would~
14 2 | the changes which eighty years had wrought in her features.~
15 2 | for them. He~was forty-two years old, and had been twenty-five
16 2 | and had been twenty-five years in the~household. Mademoiselle
17 2 | another. For twenty-~five years there had been neither trouble
18 3 | back to Paris, after twenty years~absence, under the name
19 3 | bonnet-shape, renewed every five years~at Nantes,for Mademoiselle
20 3 | her property at thirty-six~years of age, and managed it herself,
21 3 | twelve, and the eldest twenty~years of age) came to spend a
22 3 | Kergarouet, now sixteen years of age. The~rector, Monsieur
23 3 | Turkish pipe after twenty years' usage, and~a pack of cards
24 3 | evenings for the last fifteen years at the hotel de~Guenic,
25 3 | penetrate. For the last six years the rector coughed~when
26 4 | carried on nightly for~twenty years, were interrupted now and
27 4 | companions, accustomed for years to~observe each other, had
28 4 | across~the savings of forty years and landed property as well
29 4 | In all~the twenty-four years since she came of age she
30 4 | A woman over forty years old!" exclaimed the baroness. "
31 5 | The~patient care of twenty years might be rendered worthless.
32 5 | strong as a Turk, and forty years~old. Our dear Calyste was
33 6 | Mademoiselle des Touches was two years old when her mother died,~
34 6 | Faucombe, an old man sixty years of age, had married a~young
35 6 | powerful memory. At eighteen years~of age she was as well-informed
36 6 | when she was~twenty-one years of age, the old archaeologist
37 6 | to invest. At twenty-~one years of age a girl with such
38 6 | 1816 she was twenty-five years old. She knew~nothing of
39 6 | she was in 1817.~Eighteen years had passed over her head
40 6 | gardener, not less, in two years, than seventeen francs.~ ~
41 6 | revisit Les Touches for~two years, not until her return from
42 6 | writer for the last seven~years, as she had so many other
43 7 | country~houses built a hundred years ago. It was, evidently,
44 7 | laws in granting me a dozen years of youth beyond~my due,"
45 7 | parted us. I am thirteen years~older than /he/, and even
46 7 | not~seen them these twenty years, and they are married to
47 8 | de Casteran, was twenty~years old at the time of her marriage
48 8 | intimate friends. For three years, from 1828 to~1831, Beatrix,
49 8 | mind was busy. These first years of the bewilderment the
50 8 | unhoped-for triumph in the~fifteen years of the Restoration to reconstruct
51 8 | swarmed, during the three years succeeding July, 1830, like
52 8 | There she has remained two years; she has written to me~several
53 8 | Three Italian operas in two~years! You cannot say that love
54 8 | themselves when~shared. These two years have been to me a lifetime,
55 8 | remarked Vignon. "She is ten years older~than he; and it is
56 8 | and will be for twenty years to come, so~I can speak
57 10| consequence in a woman forty-seven years of age.~ ~"Monsieur le chevalier,"
58 10| not~seen her son for two years, and does not know when
59 11| marquise.~ ~"I am forty years old, and I love him!" said
60 11| have shed over the lost~years of my youth! To be loved
61 11| genius has striven through~years of toil to realize but one
62 12| despotic sternness of twenty years. That grand and noble~Camille
63 12| life. If a man, after ten years'~happiness, were not as
64 12| For myself, I am not forty years old; I have not bent my
65 12| present Thisbe was eighteen years~old.~ ~The baroness ran
66 12| mortgaged these two hundred~years, and so they may remain
67 12| will wait~for you twenty years, if need be. I am young,
68 13| hidden wrath of the past two years really acting upon the present~
69 14| of at least three hundred years. Above it the rock has~been
70 14| what you are to me. For ten years I have had no~happiness
71 16| chevalier. "It is sixty-eight years since I have~looked at any
72 17| pretty Sabine, just twenty years old, was the~only disposable
73 17| at once what we should be years~hence. Think always that
74 17| for one hundred and fifty years! Mademoiselle de Pen-Hoel
75 18| Calyste, during his two years' residence in~Paris, had
76 18| again after nearly three years! How~shall we depict the
77 18| of~letters. In the three years since Calyste had seen her,
78 19| betrayed! at the end of three years,~at twenty-two years of
79 19| three years,~at twenty-two years of age!"~ ~Her teeth chattered,
80 19| secrets, repulsed through years in their~duel with hidden
81 20| find yourself within a few years in possession of a~considerable
82 20| shall soon be thirty-five years~old."~ ~She refused to go
83 21| because I am not thirty-six years old. In the eyes of~some
84 21| spite of my thirty-five years I appear to be /de trop/,"
85 21| thin little man about fifty~years of age, with a face as white
86 22| Schiltz, then about~nine years old, at Saint-Denis. Having
87 22| himself to. So that two years after his desertion by Beatrix,
88 22| for at the~end of three years he had four hundred thousand
89 22| the position won in five years by Madame Schontz~from the
90 22| savings for the last three years and of the constant movement~
91 23| Jealous for the last two years of Madame du Bruel,~she
92 23| a man about forty-~three years of age, half worn-out, did
93 23| scoundrels above and below twelve years, and~in every other social
94 24| though he was now~fully fifty years of age. Monsieur d'Ajuda
95 24| his wife for at least two years; she must show him Switzerland,~
96 24| count will soon be twelve years old, and he finds in Madame~
97 25| known you. In~less than five years you have made him save what
98 25| is getting to be~eighty years old. Now, if you know how
99 25| yourself for five or six years in the provinces if you
100 25| scheme. At the end of five years Monsieur is~tired of me.
101 25| eyes. She is thirty-seven years old, that Schontz of yours,
102 25| you. After a lease of six years a woman has a right~to do
103 25| profession obtain after years of toil and~successes only;
104 26| you/ have known me four~years!"~ ~"And I am ready, madame,"
105 26| found Rochefide~aged by two years; he had not even put on
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