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1 2 | THE BARON, HIS WIFE, AND SISTER~Early in the month of May,
2 2 | Guenic the baron's elder sister, and an only son, aged twenty-one,~
3 2 | kind to his~elder and only sister, Mademoiselle Zephirine
4 2 | understand that sale made to his~sister before the war; which provided
5 2 | two old~people (for the sister lived only for and by the
6 2 | triumphant Bourbons, the~old sister, so saving and miserly for
7 2 | either his wife, his blind~sister, or his friends, whose medical
8 2 | line, nor to his old blind sister,~heroically erect, whose
9 2 | having kissed his wife and sister, he sat down in his old
10 2 | arm-chair, the octogenarian sister,~like in all points save
11 2 | of her octogenarian blind sister a music as~luminous and
12 2 | have dropped the paper, sister, but you are not asleep,"
13 2 | were so like brother and sister.~Mariotte's wages were ninety
14 2 | When the baron begged his sister in his~wife's name to continue
15 2 | kissed the baroness like a sister; she made a daughter of
16 2 | such as the~lying-in of her sister, and her nourishment, and
17 3 | up, "unless Madame or my sister"~ ~The two ladies here made
18 3 | dukes. In her and in her sister the illustrious~Breton house
19 3 | Pen-Hoels ended. Her younger sister had married a~Kergarouet,
20 4 | emotion to the old blind sister. The baroness~would give
21 4 | Let him say what he likes, sister," said Zephirine; "as long
22 4 | king. We win the basket, sister."~ ~This victory, gained
23 4 | Charlotte."~ ~"I have sent; my sister will receive my letter to-morrow,"
24 4 | chamber nor from that of his~sister, the baroness looked at
25 5 | dear boy," said the old sister, taking a~silver whistle
26 5 | baroness.~ ~"You seem annoyed, sister; I know it by the tone of
27 5 | He looked round upon his sister, his~son, and the baroness. "
28 6 | confided her daughter to her sister, a nun of~Chelles. Madame
29 8 | and the aged~brother and sister framed by that ancient hall,
30 8 | with my benefactress, my sister; but I prove, at any rate,~
31 8 | her boy's chair, like the sister of Dido in Guerin's~picture,
32 9 | whom he thought of as a~sister.~ ~He did not go home till
33 10| Let the boy amuse himself, sister," cried the baron. "Yesterday
34 10| Mademoiselle de Pen-Hoel, her sister and niece; they~are dreadfully
35 10| objections raised by her elder sister,~who refused positively
36 10| see her, dragged her old sister forward, paying no~attention
37 10| proposal, but we fearmy sister, my daughter, and~myselfto
38 10| myselfto inconvenience you."~ ~"Sister, I shall not put these ladies
39 10| and complained that her~sister Jacqueline had been in such
40 12| brother to~me, as I shall be a sister to you; and I desire that
41 12| saw you she became to me a~sister, a friend, a comrade, what
42 17| become a nun like her eldest~sister; two of the remaining sisters
43 17| leaning on the youngest sister Athenais, who was smiling
44 17| as~I shall feel I have a sister and a friend in you."~ ~
45 17| the need of thanking the sister of the~Visitation. In memory
46 18| that is, of Calyste. Tell sister Clotilde that her melancholy
47 18| happy by her mother and sister, who saw in Calyste's~coolness
48 21| months during which her sister Clotilde and~her mother
49 21| as she sat with her young sister Athenais (whose marriage~
50 21| Clotilde, smiling, to her sister; "she never keeps her~adorers
51 22| consequence of the death of his sister, the first wife~of the Marquis
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