Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library
Alphabetical    [«  »]
reaches 1
reaching 1
reaction 6
read 49
reader 3
readily 3
readiness 1
Frequency    [«  »]
50 salon
50 soon
49 hands
49 read
48 fortune
48 gasselin
48 oh
Honoré de Balzac
Beatrix

IntraText - Concordances

read

   Paragraph
1 2 | illiterate as a peasant. He~could read, write, and do some little 2 2 | prayer-book, he had not~read three volumes in the course 3 2 | the baroness, who never read the "Quotidienne"~without 4 2 | as she~heard that paper read. The three guns hanging 5 2 | lingers like a~divining echo, read books in which the pages 6 4 | on~whose face could be read her anxiety. She colored 7 5 | that it was possible to read the thoughts that crossed 8 5 | Camille Maupin has made him read many books; he has~had adventuresYou 9 6 | in his library; where she~read everything it pleased her 10 6 | everything it pleased her to read. She thus obtained a knowledge~ 11 7 | calling aloud for genius. He read there those~works of imagination, 12 8 | from Beatrix. Take it and read it; you can now understand~ 13 8 | opium; his harem of books to~read disgusts him with real work. 14 8 | Felicite has taught me;~I read with her; she gives me lessons 15 8 | and in the poems I have read with Camille? Alas!~there 16 8 | art can tell to those who~read them. She grasped them rapidly, 17 8 | upset quiver. Without having read~Beaumarchais, she felt, 18 8 | to Vignon, who began to read it,~taking up and putting 19 8 | Claude Vignon, who had only read the first~page. "Do people 20 9 | look in which she could read the tears he was~suppressing 21 9 | his nothingness could be read~upon his face mingled with 22 10| fazzling glance? Had I not read into your soul?~The eyes 23 10| than Guerande,~Camille was read and admired; she was thought 24 11| interesting books. You have read nothing as yet of~George 25 11| nothing about it; they don't read us like that~dreadful author."~ ~" 26 11| speak to her. He wanted~to read her eyes, to bathe in their 27 12| finally composed and which he read aloud~to his poor, astonished 28 12| jetty of Guerande,~when I read on the shores of the ocean 29 12| first time in her~life she read a love-letter.~ ~Calyste 30 12| there, in the grotto, he read as~follows:~ ~Madame de 31 12| asking for it.~ ~Calyste read it aloud to her. And these 32 12| compelled the anxious mother to read~it. This act of indiscretion 33 13| of her pleasure, as she read~and re-read the letter, 34 13| letter.~ ~Camille took it and read it; but as she read it, 35 13| and read it; but as she read it, her eyes filled with~ 36 14| allowed his~thoughts to be read! When he saw the beautiful 37 14| Mademoiselle des Touches, who read~a book of theological mysticism 38 14| mysticism while Calyste read "Indiana,"the~first work 39 15| acts as high as~virtue. Read thus, this history is that 40 16| him from us, led him to read~impious books, taught him 41 17| embrasure of a window and~read as follows:~ ~Camille Maupin 42 18| Doesn't this little scene read to you like a page out of 43 19| right to~think it wrong or read him a lesson. It is far 44 20| Calyste found the letter and read it. Seeing Sabine's sentence 45 20| pocket.~ ~"Why don't you read it?"~ ~"I know what it is 46 20| went to his own room to read his letter. When he was 47 22| francs~sometimes merely to read in the newspapers: 'Lelia, 48 23| evenings Madame Schontz read Fabien like a book~and said 49 25| remained,~like the brandies I read of to-day in the market


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