Paragraph
1 1 | One of the towns in which may be found the most correct
2 1 | town has three gates, where may be seen the rings of the~
3 1 | a suit of antique armor) may walk alone, not without
4 1 | key~of the coast, which may boast, not less than the
5 1 | silent, damp, and gloomy lane may be seen the arch of~a door,
6 1 | Here it is,~such as you may see it still at Guerande:
7 1 | family, for at its summit may still be seen an iron socket,
8 1 | attracts your imagination, you may perhaps~ask yourself why
9 1 | of the upper rooms they may be imagined after~this description
10 2 | SISTER~Early in the month of May, in the year 1836, the period
11 2 | Vendee. To-day~that fact may be admitted. These hands
12 3 | green~bonnet, in which she may have visited her melons,
13 3 | tenderness for his father, may have guessed it as she saw
14 4 | first and second players may, and sometimes do, absorb
15 4 | be~too uneasy. The harm may not be as great as they
16 5 | destroyed her pleasure.~ ~It may seem strange to those who
17 5 | hearts. Though the result may be the~development of their
18 6 | woman, however~superior she may be, the worship she inspired
19 6 | physical influences? Science may some day find the reason
20 6 | The glance of an observer may be lost in that soul, which~
21 6 | gravity of~that majestic face may have dismayed. The upper
22 6 | Venus Callipyge. There we may see~the shadowy line of
23 6 | motions. This observation may be called~bi-lateral; it
24 6 | however little of a Turk he may be, regrets the~presence
25 6 | celebrated man, who is nameless, may be~regarded as the master
26 7 | difficult to cross), it may be~more correct to call
27 7 | all these things, which~may, perhaps, escape the eyes
28 7 | court-yard. Such emotions, we may remark, do not assail a~
29 8 | letter yesterday, and who may be~here to-morrow, is the
30 8 | toward the things of Art. You may believe a poor woman who~
31 8 | me. You will find what I may~call the most penetrating
32 8 | even~though the love itself may be eternal. I have no right
33 8 | where that dear great~genius may fail.~ ~Dear angel, I am
34 8 | for your eldest son, who may be four~times as rich as
35 8 | whichever of her nieces you may choose."~ ~"And besides,
36 8 | how~dangerous such jokes may prove to be," said Mademoiselle
37 9 | from Croisic; the~weather may be bad, or the boats not
38 9 | embarrasses the marquise; she may be delighted with your admiration,~
39 10| cannot last long. Therefore I may as well tell you now that
40 10| game. It is difficult; you may lose it; you have to do~
41 10| love must bend to you. You may perhaps have yielded to
42 10| fear a struggle. Your power~may please young souls, like
43 10| to so many, by which we may advance~toward the infinite.
44 10| mind~has brought us; we may, both of us, sing that dreadful
45 10| harm; perhaps, indeed, you may be~more at your ease at
46 12| was or ever will be, as may readily be~supposed, a brilliant
47 12| adore you, whatever you may do to~me.~ ~Camille calls
48 12| lighten him, that his Sun may warm him.~ ~He whom you
49 12| freed from me. Therefore I may return to Les Touches to-morrow,~
50 12| to Les Touches to-morrow,~may I not? You will not refuse
51 12| can~give you. Whatever you may think, she is young and
52 12| tenderness is inexhaustible; she may ignore~the graces of our
53 12| desire that this letter~may terminate a correspondence
54 12| hundred~years, and so they may remain for two hundred more;
55 13| be felt, however much~she may deny having taken it. Nothing
56 13| across to~Croisic, so that we may drive home by way of Batz.
57 13| said to~the footman, "You may go,"a brief sentence, which
58 13| my own peace of mind. He may, perhaps, have had a passing
59 13| However~little of a woman you may think me, I am woman enough,
60 14| grouped about them, "and may God preserve her to~us,
61 14| shores of ocean that~this may be the solitary instance
62 14| magnify the world itself. It may be~that only Frenchwomen
63 15| the finale~perfect!"~ ~"I may have told you that I would
64 15| approval of the matter, it may take some time to effect~
65 15| however /blase/ or depraved he may be, whose~love will not
66 15| threatened by a~rival. He may wish to leave a woman, but
67 16| Let her be accursed,~and may God never pardon her! She
68 16| the du Guenics!"~ ~"She may perhaps restore them," said
69 16| good intentions to Calyste. May she only be~enabled to carry
70 16| foot in this house, that I may get~out of it," cried the
71 16| efforts grant that Calyste may live!"~ ~"I shall live,
72 17| contrary, one long egotism. If may be that~God placed you,
73 17| all the other adverbs you may choose to employ,~and you
74 17| Your Sabine.~ ~ ~Guerande, May, 1838.~ ~I take up my Odyssey.
75 17| thinks that all~her son may do is right, even if he
76 17| trifle over her.~ ~Guerande, May 15th.~ ~Up to the present
77 17| prove that the impossible may~exist. Some day, when we
78 17| happy woman, in these rooms; may~the omen be a happy one
79 17| conscience lest to save~Calyste I may have sacrificed you. Bind
80 18| extinct. I watched, as you~may well believe, every wind
81 18| in the~nineteenth century may be called that of the Deserted
82 18| salon of our poor Camillewho may indeed have~acted wisely.
83 19| set in, and possibly she may bear~the marks for the rest
84 19| etc., etc.~ ~Such speeches may surprise the reader, but
85 19| throughout all social zones, you may as well reject all seekers
86 20| Two or three examples may serve to show this reaction
87 20| women who have endured it may behold~their own experience.~ ~
88 20| in the obvious and, as we may~call them, exterior matters
89 20| dropping on a sofa, "I may never make myself a~blonde,
90 21| passionate, as an honest woman may be, but I ought to be~manoeuvring,
91 21| months I don't~know what he may become; but as for me, I
92 21| Don't you understand? She may give him a child. And if
93 22| for the man. This contrast may inspire more than one young
94 22| Guenic, by practising (as she may select) the most~aggressive
95 22| not really named, as you may suppose, either~Schontz
96 22| to wife or mistress.~ ~We may understand the position
97 23| Madame Schontz had, as you may well~believe, a plan. Jealous
98 24| Brossette to know how far I may be your accomplice," cried
99 25| women a certain honor; we may~play the fool with them,
100 25| rest is my affair; there may be important~places to be
101 25| twenty-six! And what a woman! I may say she is my~pupil. If
102 26| Madame Schontz. "Then I may still find some one~in the
103 26| fortress-like demeanor, if we may so call it. She thought~
104 26| in case of~infidelity, I may poison you without fear
|