bold = Main text
Paragraph grey = Comment text
1 Note| existing no~longer except in history, and the transition period
2 1 | dates than with the truer history of manners and~customs.
3 1 | Guerande after reading this history you cannot fail to~quiver
4 2 | of the day on which this history~begins, the baron, who,
5 5 | geography and the circumspect history of a young ladies'~boarding-school,
6 6 | great part in the literary history of our epoch, and that her~
7 6 | circumstance belongs to~the history of her heart, and will be
8 6 | play of three months which history has called the Hundred Days,~
9 6 | at the~moment when this history begins, almost exactly what
10 6 | Until the period when this history begins, she had led as happy
11 7 | presently.~ ~"You said you had a history to tell me, and a letter
12 7 | and while I tell you that history I will sit by the window~
13 9 | Felicite had told him the history of the marquise, listened
14 10 | keep his eyes on Beatrix.~ ~History must lose the curious conversations
15 13 | in her mind minutely the history of the past week. In a~moment
16 15 | virtue. Read thus, this history is that of many women.~ ~
17 17 | describing Calyste and giving his history,~and also stating certain
18 17 | many women~reading this history will admit to themselves
19 18 | of a drama~which, in this history of the manners and morals
20 22 | XXII THE NORMAL HISTORY OF AN UPPER-CLASS GRISETTE~
21 22 | irrupted elsewhere into this history of French manners and~customs
22 23 | the day. The digression is history.~ ~In 1838, Fabien du Ronceret,
23 25 | Louis XIV."~ ~"That is how history is written!" replied Claude
24 Add | Chouans~The Seamy Side of History~Jealousies of a Country
25 Add | Victor de~The Seamy Side of History~Cousin Betty~ ~Vignon, Claude~
|