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1 1 | itself,~like that of the house of France, which connoisseurs
2 1 | kitchen and~offices. The house is build of freestone from
3 1 | solidity. The~door of the house must have had a charming
4 1 | plank ceilings~of Tristan's house at Tours. If so, it would
5 1 | two upper stories of the house there are but two rooms.~
6 1 | yard which separates the house from the~stables. This tower
7 1 | mansion adjoins the next house. The harmony so carefully
8 1 | minute depicting of the~house, the surprising figures
9 2 | period had~the chief of the house of Guenic been more in keeping
10 2 | of La~Penissiere, or the house of Guenic would probably
11 2 | servant returned to the house in Guerande, they took their
12 2 | little lane leading to~the house. The baron looked round
13 2 | darksome~walls of the ancient house. The two dogs and the two
14 2 | the horses and dogs of the house, and talked to them and~
15 2 | s return, had ruled the house. When she~learned that the
16 3 | greeting of the~mistress of the house, he replied by an ecclesiastically
17 3 | chaplain in his seigneur's house. In church, when he~gave
18 3 | sister the illustrious~Breton house of the Pen-Hoels ended.
19 4 | misfortunes of the royal house. Sometimes the evening ended
20 4 | after they had left the house they would say, as they~
21 4 | Mademoiselle de Pen-Hoel to her house in the Place de Guerande,
22 4 | this very moment in her house the most venomous of all
23 5 | out anxiety, flew from the house to the~gate and opened it
24 5 | a respectable or decent~house. Its mistress leads an irregular
25 5 | coming down~upon you in that house."~ ~"Who is making Fanny
26 6 | thousand francs from the house of business where her guardian~
27 6 | to~Ghent, leaving their house to Mademoiselle des Touches.
28 6 | 1815. The garden of this house is to-day worth two millions.~ ~
29 6 | charming young woman opened her house to artists, authors~of renown,
30 6 | thousand francs a year and a house~magnificently appointed,
31 6 | disillusion in 1818. The house was~uninhabitable, and she
32 6 | be~admitted to view the house. They flocked from the village
33 7 | resemble a stiffened ocean. The house, fairly well built of a
34 7 | Guerande. One facade of the house looks on the road to~Guerande,
35 7 | The grayish tones of the house harmonize admirably with
36 7 | lie in wait for him. This house without land~(for the bulk
37 7 | quivered as he approached the house, and rang the bell, and~
38 7 | commit some debauch in this~house which might lift for a moment
39 8 | again,~Beatrix met at my house a man with whom I had expected
40 8 | receive them together~in my house. This circumstance kept
41 8 | palazzo in Venice, a summer-~house at Sorrento, a villa in
42 8 | service. The~poor and noble house of Guenic little knew with
43 9 | might~not be seen from the house. The adorable boy was ashamed
44 9 | at the foot~of which is a house where travellers can take
45 9 | restricted means of his father's house. A~young man brought up
46 10| silence now reigned in the house; he heard, but~without noticing,
47 10| were engaged by the custom-~house," said the conductor to
48 10| when she~left her husband's house.~ ~"Oh, yes!" said the viscountess; "
49 11| tea-~caddy. The illustrious house of du Guenic served a little
50 11| Touches~disappeared toward the house, taking Calyste with her.
51 12| ease with you~in Camille's house, I could act out my natural
52 12| box to box all through the house."~ ~The baroness listened
53 12| her to the alley of her house, neglecting~Thisbe. The
54 13| Calyste entered~his own house, where Mariotte gave him
55 13| lend you my little country house~near Paris, where you will
56 14| turf which lay between the house and garden leaning on Calyste'
57 16| Charlotte, with a sense that the house was already~hers; how comfortable
58 16| some changes inside the house, won't you, Calyste?" she~
59 16| who now came vainly to the house to tempt~him out with the
60 16| death. He no longer left the house, but sat in the~garden on
61 16| the cherished child of the house could~no longer mount the
62 16| when she sets foot in this house, that I may get~out of it,"
63 16| light that front of the house, and show you~the old carvings
64 17| She had lately sold her house in the rue du Mont-Blanc,
65 17| purchased for her a charming new~house in the rue de Bourbon for
66 17| these arrangements. The new house in the rue de Bourbon was~
67 17| evening, by the door of my house, as a~messenger from Himself,
68 17| children~and of your old Breton house than of you in offering
69 17| at the hotel du Guenic,~a house as covered with carving
70 17| the vast domains of the house of Guenic, bought~back,
71 18| on a visit to a~paltry house in Brittany? Why should
72 18| de Monceaux, in~a little house suitable to my means; and
73 18| Chartres, and recognized the house at once although he had~
74 18| taken refuge in a "little house" formerly belonging to a~
75 18| external appearance of the house, which was ill-kept by the~
76 19| Calyste returned to his own house about two in the morning.
77 19| minutes to the vicomte's~house and begged him to do him
78 19| told me this morning at the~house of the young Duchesse Berthe
79 20| husband~when he left the house, that she might divine,
80 20| fancy signified, she, whose house possessed a~calorifere which
81 21| her daughter to her own house, partly to soothe the wounds
82 22| husbands are constrained, his house, in~which since the death
83 22| apocryphal regions. If the house is near the line traced
84 22| third floor of the only house that remained in the rue
85 22| invite his~friends to the house with economy, declared,
86 22| Josephine Schiltz. A little house was~now hired in the rue
87 22| that presentation at her house had to be proposed some~
88 22| that class admitted to her house)~invested and reinvested
89 24| honor to receive in your house and seriously protect~Madame
90 24| toilet as of putting her house in a~state to receive this
91 25| you two days~hence at the house of Madame la Marquise de
92 25| just such a supper, at the house of a courtesan as handsome
93 26| monsieur; take back your house and all your~property; I
94 26| thousand francs for~that little house, and I'll promise to find
95 26| to Madame de Rochefide's house~with the firm intention
96 26| return to your handsome house in the due d'Anjou and be
97 26| you from the window of~a house from which you had looked
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