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1 1 | their dolmens. Useless to say~what they were! To-day this
2 2 | Huguenots; something,~one might say, stupid, due perhaps to
3 3 | went to open it.~ ~"I dare say it is Monsieur le cure;
4 3 | this evening."~ ~"Don't say anything about those visits
5 3 | gossiping."~ ~"What do they say?" asked the baroness.~ ~"
6 3 | girls and the old women all say that he is in love with~
7 3 | spendthrift. Impossible to say what she might not have
8 4 | her husband.~ ~"Let him say what he likes, sister,"
9 4 | left the house they would say, as they~walked home: "Monsieur
10 4 | more wine~drunk there, they say, during the few weeks of
11 4 | not be as great as they say it is. I will~find out the
12 4 | baroness. "I have heard~say in Ireland that a woman
13 5 | handsome."~ ~"What is that you say, Mariotte?" exclaimed the
14 5 | what the baroness would say to her~son.~ ~"Are you going
15 5 | Mademoiselle des Touches~is, they say, as black as a crow, as
16 6 | bete/ (a stupid air). I say the word frankly, for all
17 7 | chateau," and they would still say "seigneur" if the fief were~
18 7 | know if~I am right. I will say I am ill, and stay in my
19 7 | consistent natures who say at a certain age: 'If I
20 7 | not think~myself weak, I say, 'I would be a woman like
21 8 | is brave; bravery, they say, is the only virtue into
22 8 | she~added.~ ~"You don't say so!" exclaimed Claude. "
23 8 | in two~years! You cannot say that love has made him idle.
24 8 | I write, therefore, to say that I shall soon pay you
25 8 | so uneasy.'"~ ~"Did she say that? Then I can forgive
26 8 | nothing~only to love."~ ~"They say that suffices, my angel,"
27 8 | you believe it?"~ ~"They say so, but I have never known
28 9 | the mall. He~heard them say his name, and he slipped
29 9 | them next winter. If you say two words about it to Charlotte~
30 9 | about it to Charlotte~she'll say four to Calyste, and a girl
31 9 | Touches."~ ~"It was for me to say that to you," replied Calyste,
32 9 | failed him, he had~nothing to say; a slight sweat pearled
33 10| words enabled Claude to say~them without interruption
34 10| fishing, as the English say, for compliments,~which
35 10| will see him."~ ~"You don't say so!" said Madame de Kergarouet. "
36 10| find the witty things you say, madame; there is nothing
37 10| nothing new~that one can say."~ ~"I assure you, madame,
38 11| to compromiseI will not~say my reputation, but my happiness,"
39 12| misfortune~to have nothing to say to you that you do not know
40 12| a man should~love me, or say he loves me, is an insult.
41 12| how can you oblige me to~say these things, which rend
42 12| only rival,is not this to say that you reign in that heart~
43 12| for Camille, you need only say the word, or give me a mere~
44 13| capriccio/, as the Italians say. She thought she~was equalling
45 13| are, and, let us~frankly say so, how virtuous! But, Camille,
46 13| do not love Calyste, you say; that is true,~is it not?
47 13| replied, not knowing what~to say or do.~ ~The violent passions
48 14| only propitious place to say these things, for never
49 14| to make it eternal."~ ~"Say rather, madame, that you
50 14| away his head.~ ~"Did I not say truly, Calyste, that you
51 14| and I, I~have no right to say one word to you."~ ~"Ah!"
52 14| too humiliated," she would say; "my past has robbed the
53 15| with her.~ ~"What will they say to each other?" Calyste
54 15| We have something to say to each other," added Conti,
55 15| silly or malicious enough to~say: 'Here am I, free at last.'
56 15| served, Camille tried to~say a few words, after begging
57 16| head."~ ~"Calyste doesn't say a word," said old Zephirine, "
58 16| woman like that, who, they say, has gone off with a~singer"~ ~"
59 16| rupture upon yourself, and say that you have rejected me.
60 16| that you have rejected me. Say that you~do not wish to
61 16| occasion, when, as seamen say, they sailed in company
62 16| de Rochefide," he would say. "I'll tell you my~first
63 16| The baroness dared not say more. Her son's answer seemed
64 17| to me often. Calyste, I say nothing more to you, but
65 17| their own lessons~when they say to their daughters: "That
66 17| of a few~daysI might even say a few hours! All your counsels
67 17| not my husband,that is to say, if I were married to~another,
68 17| remember how you blamed, I dare say justly, the young~women
69 17| and I have kept them to say as we part; for~there are
70 18| will!~ ~It is enough to say to wives who are still half
71 18| sure,~allow me to go and say a word to d'Arthez, whom
72 18| of me; what will it not say on seeing us together!~Adieuoh!
73 18| mother the Portuguese, not to say yellow, and as dry and~stiff
74 18| My dear'?can you really say that your wife is still
75 19| gay young mothers do and say. This~little scene gave
76 20| into a footman, came to say:~ ~"Madame is served."~ ~"
77 20| clasped around their necks, say to yourselves that those
78 20| thrown away.~ ~"I don't say that, my angel," replied
79 21| make Canalis and Nathan say of /me/ in verse and prose~
80 21| He is beginning now to say it is ridiculous that~he
81 22| the women of this class say of a~man, "I hold him!"
82 23| provincial took care not to say that Grindot, the architect,
83 24| are religious, and if you say yes, your promise, which
84 24| effort, faith! Love is to say to one's self: 'She whom
85 25| I hope to end, as they say on the stage, as the~progenitrix
86 25| that the world couldn't say she attached herself to~
87 25| And what a woman! I may say she is my~pupil. If Madame
88 26| a look~from Beatrix, to say one word to her in private.
89 26| Why, get angry, and say: 'I believed you loved me,
90 26| nullity, as the lawyers say. You have~too much good
91 26| above all, desirous to say to you, that although I~
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