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Alphabetical    [«  »]
native 4
natural 18
naturally 6
nature 66
natures 7
naughty 1
nautical 1
Frequency    [«  »]
67 friend
67 gave
66 father
66 nature
66 noble
65 alone
65 end
Honoré de Balzac
Beatrix

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nature

   Paragraph
1 Note| which he painted of human nature.~ ~In "The Great Man of 2 1 | days gave life to inanimate nature.~These relics, resisting 3 1 | planted~by the hands of Breton nature, one of the most luxuriant 4 1 | is found in Breton human~nature. Even now, after the Revolution 5 1 | architect. This rich, coy nature, so untrodden, with all 6 2 | fatigue, in which the animal nature alone is visible. Thought~ 7 2 | this monotony, like that of~Nature varied only by alterations 8 3 | enough to ascertain the nature of her~perfections or her 9 5 | a sort of crime against nature~in loving a minor, and that 10 6 | the sentence pronounced by Nature upon all her~creations, 11 6 | reserved the~brightest tints of Nature's palette, and the richest 12 6 | shaded by a charming down. Nature would have made a~blunder 13 6 | abandonment of those whom Nature destines for maternity; 14 6 | so self-sufficing, of a nature so~leonine, that a man, 15 6 | likes those calumnies.~ ~The nature of her beauty has not been 16 6 | temperament is the only nature capable of~repelling the 17 6 | an arm given to women by Nature to~resist the invasion of 18 6 | strangeness of her life and the nature of her~talent. She observed 19 6 | when women are~summoned by Nature to renounce all love.~ ~ 20 6 | She knew his nerveless nature, his laziness, his utter~ 21 7 | thus the efforts of botanic nature;~those sands where the eye 22 7 | ourselves to our nervous nature and~driving our feelings 23 7 | eloquently~interrupted him.~ ~"Nature changed her laws in granting 24 8 | beauties in full relief. Nature has given her that~princess 25 8 | and yet I /know him/. His nature is charming,~apparently, 26 8 | his dupe. That Southern nature, that~impassioned artist 27 8 | pleasure of probing that nature to the bottom. Certain of~ 28 8 | something too grandiose in her~nature to allow her to change. 29 8 | do so, for you~inherit my nature. But, Calyste, do not be 30 9 | through it they see all Nature glorious, and woman~radiant. 31 9 | Touches had awakened his nature; Beatrix inflamed both his 32 9 | Like other young men, his nature~was in the throes and convulsions 33 10 | judiciously. Beatrix is dogged by nature; Camille has grandeur.~Probably 34 10 | genius, love is not~what Nature made it,an imperious need, 35 11 | t want to corrupt such a nature as yours. Yet~deception 36 11 | it is the~ensign which Nature hoists over her most precious 37 11 | one of those accidents of Nature? Come,~call up your sense 38 12 | there is not a trait in your nature which~my heart does not 39 13 | as deeply agitated as the nature before~them was tranquil, 40 13 | late to contemplations of~nature; she cheated the aching 41 13 | certain criticisms upon your nature, of which you have~sometimes 42 13 | I assure you that your nature is cold enough~to enable 43 14 | great spectacles of primeval Nature. Perhaps the rocks of~Croisic 44 14 | those of Sardinia, where Nature is~dedicated to grandiose 45 14 | timid copying of effects of nature), a rocky hollow polished 46 14 | imitation of the whims of Nature. Curious features are innumerable;~ 47 14 | caves and little peaks of~nature's fortress. Not to be hampered 48 14 | never in my~life did I see nature more in keeping with my 49 14 | praise and adoration which~nature suggests to youth; in them 50 15 | him; but who can fathom a nature so false and~deceiving? 51 16 | that lucidity of mind which nature gives to~the dying, he trembled 52 18 | it!~that cold, unhealthy nature, so persistent yet so flabby,~ 53 18 | in a word, they pass~from nature to art.~ ~Madame de Rochefide 54 18 | of~men who are endowed by nature with frankness, until they 55 18 | Madame de Rochefide, her nature was too~instinctively artificial 56 18 | varied according to the nature or~the cleverness of women, 57 18 | What is there in love? Does Nature rebel against the social 58 18 | nobility; she presented a nature more~ethereal than slimy, 59 18 | possiblyof marriage with a nature like their own; beings whose 60 18 | Bretons possess a courage of nature which makes them obstinate~ 61 19 | with men~of a conquering nature. To such natures the presence 62 22 | gentleman endowed with a nature~such as Mademoiselle des 63 22 | in all things; he owed to nature the~convenient genius of 64 22 | meeting with a woman of~noble nature. But he saw nothing surprising 65 25 | Charles-Edouard, the latter, to whom~Nature had given, no doubt sarcastically, 66 26 | model of a vain and~empty nature, without strength, coquettish


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