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501 2 | Rochejaquelein, d'Elbee, Bonchamps, and~the Prince de Loudon.
502 25 | getting fat, Beatrix is all bonesit will be a~change for you!
503 3 | at Guerande, and an old bonnet-shape, renewed every five years~
504 3 | de Pen-Hoel allowed her bonnets the~longevity of a legislature.
505 22 | have done? For instance, no~book-keeper could add up the figures
506 7 | resembles a boudoir; the bookshelves are full, but the fascinating~
507 22 | thus she was camping on the border-land between misery and its~reverse.
508 1 | squares for vegetables, bordered with cordons of fruit-~trees,
509 22 | woman to be found in the borderland which separates the~thirteenth
510 22 | of the~kind who are truly bores, and who plant too many
511 14 | kerchiefs which cover their bosoms fly carelessly open. Some
512 4 | there was talk of whist and~boston being games of more interest
513 7 | stifling thus the efforts of botanic nature;~those sands where
514 14 | roots would indicate to a botanist~an existence of at least
515 7 | furniture; it~resembles a boudoir; the bookshelves are full,
516 4 | Guerande. The Demoiselles Bougniol let their lodgings~last
517 1 | among those~rocks than at Boulogne or Dieppe) is still an immense
518 14 | have thought it?~with the bounteous mother, the comforter of
519 18 | he, rich, noble as the Bourbonsat the foot of the~staircase,
520 1 | a cathedral like~that of Bourges. When the soul is everywhere
521 23 | of Alencon, a certain~du Bousquier, a friend of his father. "
522 19 | took~place in a perfect bower where she played off her
523 14 | earth for~the growth of a box-plant, compact, well-nourished,
524 8 | hand, and singing with a Brabancon seigneur, while a Negro
525 11 | three deep lines~made a bracelet of wrinkles.~ ~"There, my
526 1 | supported by what we must call brackets, each ending in a~grotesque
527 8 | they are born~comedians, braggarts; extravagant in form as
528 2 | sign of race. This tiny braid, concealed in~the mass of
529 2 | gold. The baroness always braided the short locks curling
530 12 | you the other day, "Senza brama sicura ricchezza,"~seems
531 18 | whiteness of a skin revived by bran and water.~A scarf so delicate
532 25 | him he remained,~like the brandies I read of to-day in the
533 10 | Madame de Kergarouet went bravely~on in her tilt with the
534 6 | supported by the strong red~breadth of its lower mate, adorable
535 10 | Mariotte, who was clearing the~breakfast-table.~ ~"No; but a fine lady,
536 25 | last night?" he said, as he breakfasted, looking at~Aurelie.~ ~"
537 19 | fresh, embellished, and breakfasting~with a very good appetite.
538 1 | beneath them, but never breaking. The houses of the merchants~
539 26 | Arthur to-night,~and it breaks my heart."~ ~Two days later,
540 14 | than the mass of the huge breastwork when seen from the~sandy
541 14 | soft and limpid warmth. She~breathed a sweet and genial atmosphere
542 2 | shoes, ribbed stockings, breeches of greenish velveteen, a
543 20 | milk, surprised me by its brevity,~and above all by your silence
544 23 | pronounced to be his own~brew. He also made himself talked
545 17 | These fellows took~their bribes and replaced their ribbons
546 17 | them relinquish, even by bribing them with money. The French
547 19 | three~lying like a dealer in bric-a-brac, the kind and feeling Calyste~
548 7 | which she enlivened by two~brick columns supporting an arch,
549 17 | Sabine."~ ~On the box of the bridal carriage sat a /chasseur/,
550 17 | has got its eye upon it; bridges are being built, roads made,~
551 22 | animals, and from shoes to~bridles he depended wholly on his
552 8 | love, as it is by its own~bright sun and its masterpieces.
553 6 | which were reserved the~brightest tints of Nature's palette,
554 14 | A Leghorn hat with wide brims and a wreath~of blue-bells,
555 10 | it is the sentiment that brings us~nearest God. Do not love
556 20 | freshness, a gay activity, a /brio/ of~mere existence,if it
557 1 | the fragrant breath of her~briony paths, filled with the flowers
558 25 | with his purple skin and bristles for whiskers;~he looks like
559 17 | Guenic and the daughter of a British peer.~Mademoiselle des Touches
560 17 | be done in the depths of BrittanyAdieu.~ ~Your Sabine.~ ~ ~Guerande,
561 2 | of the hair had somewhat broadened, giving still more~majesty
562 15 | In short, he will fire a broadside of malicious insinuations.~
563 8 | slender, from~voluminous brocaded skirts with folds so heavy
564 1 | called in former days either~brocatelle or small brocade.~ ~On each
565 16 | Guerande physician, who broke the fever with~quinine and
566 22 | a certain good fellow, a broker~named Gobenheim (the only
567 7 | town is the open sea. A brook escapes through an~opening
568 17 | or pains) of a sort of brotherhood~which would soon have drifted
569 2 | flourished her hands,~their brownish-red color making the white arms
570 1 | vigorously with the~blues and browns of the peasantry and the
571 14 | boldness imitated~from afar by Brunelleschi (for the greatest efforts
572 8 | charm, and only one for a brunette. Besides, blondes are~more
573 8 | exuberance of life and love. Brunettes themselves are fair~at such
574 8 | too like men, we French brunettesWell, well!"~she cried, "pray
575 16 | heart."~ ~The chevalier brushed away his tears. Calyste
576 14 | the water," said Camille,~brushing away a tear.~ ~Toward morning,
577 21 | My pride is only a~sham buckler; I am without defence against
578 3 | stout shoes with silver buckles,~exhibited above his hands
579 11 | Mariotte had made galettes of buckwheat, the baroness produced a
580 22 | woman has an income, her budget prospers; but if~she approaches
581 1 | golden flowers. Two old~buffers face each other; on their
582 7 | dining-room comprises four great buffets, also of mahogany,~chairs
583 8 | sham~sentiment, infamous buffooneries of feeling. I will not tell
584 7 | house without land~(for the bulk of the estate is really
585 14 | Croisic, where the granite bulwark is~split into strange reefs,
586 8 | in order to release the burdens~on your estate. It is all
587 17 | private, as to the worthy~burghers of all lands, or that which
588 3 | had~something of the Dutch burgomaster in the placidity of its
589 18 | cause in a vanity so deeply buried in~the soul that moralists
590 14 | restless minds that they can burrow there and satisfy all longings,~
591 1 | remind us of Arabs in their burrows.~ ~Thus Guerande bears no
592 6 | management of his affairs. He busied~himself in archaeology,a
593 26 | in the rue de Chartres, butsix months hence, next~winterin
594 23 | Schontz made the Heir the butt of her wit, her~jests, and
595 25 | graceful corsage of which was buttoned with opals, and her hair
596 5 | gown, trimmed with silver buttons, a blue foulard necktie,~
597 18 | I played,~not with fire, butwith ashes! I studied Calyste;
598 3 | upon him. She dreamed~of buying back some of the best of
599 8 | never wander in those sweet by-paths moist~with dew; never stand
600 25 | made a count?"~ ~"By the bye, he bears arms," cried Aurelie,
601 1 | mixture, still visible, of the Byzantine and the Saracenic. It is~
602 25 | us go back, then."~ ~"/Ah ca!/" said Madame Schontz,
603 7 | a~large chamber, and two cabinets, one for a dressing-room,
604 19 | supersede the inconvenient~cabriolet of our ancestors. He drove
605 11 | baroness produced a tea-~caddy. The illustrious house of
606 18 | there with~the Princesse de Cadignan; it relates to some business
607 23 | chief-justice of the Royal court~at Caen (who had lately died), left
608 6 | Roman~circus, to salute its Caesar before it went to its death
609 6 | whom she calls her brother Cain), whose~recent fame has
610 3 | she was the~object of the cajoleries of the Kergarouet-Pen-Hoels,
611 19 | round the waist with more cajolery~than he would have used
612 11 | in addition to Mariotte's cakes; for which festal~event
613 2 | that Louis XVIII. landed at Calais,a~circumstance which explains
614 16 | was~felt to be a public calamity.~ ~The solemn ceremony affected
615 23 | she took the Heir in her /caleche/ to the~Bois, for she now
616 6 | Bacchus rather than the Venus Callipyge. There we may see~the shadowy
617 4 | gently tapping the bony calloused~hand of her husband.~ ~"
618 16 | on. The Guerande doctor~calmly told the baroness that as
619 20 | whose house possessed a~calorifere which heated the staircases,
620 13 | said just now that Calyste~calumniated me. Good heavens! what of
621 17 | Versailles, I turned to Calystewhom~I called my dear Calyste,
622 8 | out like a pistil from a calyx, and could fling~back the
623 9 | the twilight like a white camellia. The throat, visible to~
624 18 | in the salon of our poor Camillewho may indeed have~acted wisely.
625 10 | dragged into the~enemy's camp, had retreated to a short
626 19 | to many shepherds on the~Campagna of Rome," etc., etc.~ ~Such
627 9 | empire. Here~was the delicate campanula, or the lily, beside the
628 22 | de Berlin;~thus she was camping on the border-land between
629 1 | each side with a~silver candelabrum of singular design. A large
630 15 | queen."~ ~Calyste, whose candid face revealed his satisfaction,
631 3 | singular gingerbread-colored candle called an /oribus/ which
632 1 | which is~fastened into a candle-stick by a glass tube. Through
633 6 | olive by day and dazzling by candlelight, which distinguishes a~beautiful
634 11 | to make love to~me if you canit will be for the best."~ ~"
635 7 | hymns with the lullaby of cannon.~ ~Initiated by Felicite
636 2 | the hands of a guerilla, a~cannoneer, a common solder, a leader;
637 10 | dint of talking (as one cannons at billiards), a few~ideas,
638 7 | scattering flowers, and the canopy above it adorned with~plumes;
639 4 | engulfed her gains in those~capacious pockets of hers,for the
640 1 | the ancestors of Hugues Capet were ever heard of, this
641 13 | her~part to repress the /capriccio/, as the Italians say. She
642 1 | jerkins and varnished leather caps are as distinct~from one
643 21 | frankly, and that is wrong; to captivate~I ought to play off the
644 14 | celebrated rival, in which is the captivating~image of a young man loving
645 11 | wary or more~difficult to capture. You are wholly unable to
646 2 | last defeated and almost captured,~he returned to Guerande,
647 21 | distinction she granted only to cardinals,~bishops, simple priests,
648 6 | therefore left to chance. Little cared-~for by her uncle's wife,
649 8 | to touch at~Croisic for a cargo of salt on its way back
650 8 | Fenice, and now at the San Carlo. Three Italian operas in
651 8 | Italian jealousy which led the Carlone to murder Piola, and stuck~
652 17 | to be received among the~Carmelites, and I have entered the
653 6 | body-guard, was massacred at Les Carmes.~ ~Mademoiselle des Touches
654 5 | she found me ignorant as a carp, and she has~taught me."~ ~"
655 18 | through which Calyste~passed. Carpets in grave colors, curtains
656 Note| Etienne Lousteau, Armand Carrel in Michel~Chrestien, and,
657 10 | what she called the devil's~carryall. At Nantes, which boasted
658 15 | had said, the~composer was carrying Beatrix away with Camille'
659 1 | workmanship. It could hold a cart-load of~wood. The furniture of
660 11 | him, as~Mariotte remarked, cartloads of books.~ ~His aunt called
661 14 | jars after the fashion of caryatides.~These women go barefooted
662 8 | she smoothed the cloth, a~cascade of snow.~ ~After dinner,
663 11 | are splendid rocks there, cascades of~granite, little bays
664 1 | through the loop-~holes of the casemates once occupied by halberdiers
665 1 | have slender, delicate casings, the carvings of which have
666 3 | middle height, lost in his~cassock, from which issued two stout
667 1 | jewels distinctive of~their caste which are given to all Breton
668 1 | from one another as the castes of India, and still recognize
669 8 | fluid shedding love, he casts an ecstatic glance upon
670 3 | a~Dutchman, prudent as a cat, and persistent as a priest,
671 2 | needless. Both eyes had cataracts; but she obstinately~refused
672 6 | as their guest; but the catastrophes of March 20~intervened,
673 10 | mortified, talking much, and~catching, by dint of talking (as
674 23 | speculator felt obliged to prove categorically to Madame Schontz~that she
675 2 | war with~Charette, with Cathelineau, La Rochejaquelein, d'Elbee,
676 24 | we have been counts since~Catherine de' Medici."~ ~"I will receive
677 13 | himself unreservedly into Catholicism, which, viewed as a~system,
678 8 | entrapped, my dear~child, by his catlike manners, and you will never
679 25 | head; he passed beneath~the Caudine forks of submission. A real
680 22 | friends, "I was born with a caul"~(that is, to good luck).~ ~
681 9 | two~of them on the narrow causeway of the marsh along which
682 21 | setting myself up for a wit by caustic~and envious criticism of
683 15 | and all three watched him cautiously. No one in that~old manor-house
684 10 | gait was tolerably bold and cavalier, which, however,~was of
685 14 | way among the fissures and caves and little peaks of~nature'
686 14 | eight or ten feet~into the cavity where the box-bush grew;
687 1 | discovered on the plank ceilings~of Tristan's house at Tours.
688 18 | mantel-shelf two cases~of old celadon, between which gleamed a
689 9 | count on you~to help us celebrate her arrival. Claude, always
690 23 | of consorting with clever celebrities and so~reflecting their
691 6 | result of her obstinate celibacy. She wanted to~retain her
692 26 | conversed with the ease of a Celimene, pretending to~ignore that
693 17 | before I enter my convent cell I am permitted to cast a~
694 1 | be more exact, they are Celts.~Formerly, they must have
695 17 | oaken tables, covered with centenary linen, bending under Homeric~
696 5 | lamp beneath~the quadruply centennial hangings of that ancient
697 17 | children no longer~used the ceremonious "you;" they thee'd and thou'
698 15 | is~always a slave to his chain-companion. I am lost; I must needs
699 25 | the station they occupy, chained by the rank of their~families,
700 13 | heart and the weight of my chains. I do not want a hampered~
701 7 | singular~shape,a "duchesse," a chaise-longue, a stiff little sofa,with~
702 15 | young Breton to~refuse this challenge.~ ~"My dear friend," said
703 1 | children. Guests were lodged in chambers beneath the roof. The~servants
704 9 | lightness and agility of a~chamois, doubling like a hare that
705 6 | Army when it came to the Champ de Mars, as to a Roman~circus,
706 18 | Pont Louis XVI. and the Champs Elysees to a cafe on the
707 6 | mobility~of the lips, their changing expression, and the artistic
708 3 | stretched out toward~the chapel belonging to the Guenics,
709 3 | their~salon he was as a chaplain in his seigneur's house.
710 16 | at length~drew out an old chaplet of black wood, on which
711 19 | Saint-Germain, which~she characterized as stupid.~ ~The scene of
712 26 | desire for concealment which characterizes~the idolators of the little
713 2 | fought through the war with~Charette, with Cathelineau, La Rochejaquelein,
714 2 | our epoch. An archangel,~charged with the duty of penetrating
715 5 | has heard some very grave charges against~Mademoiselle des
716 3 | a tithe collected by him,charging the old hero to~offer the
717 8 | beneath its surface. He is a charlatan in~ ~matters of the heart.
718 8 | already spoken to you, who are charlatans externally, and yet honest.~
719 8 | effort or creative activity.~Charlemagne, Belisarious, and Constantine
720 8 | life to Calyste, who was charmed with Claude, for mind has~
721 4 | a means of eluding this charter. When all the players but
722 14 | them over the peaks and chasms like a ghost or vision;
723 17 | the bridal carriage sat a /chasseur/, who acted as~courier,
724 15 | some time to effect~this /chassez-croissez/. On such occasions the
725 2 | lived, had rewarded the chaste girlhood and the~sacred
726 10 | travelling-dress, of some common stuff, chastely~made with a chemisette body
727 6 | without~action upon the chastity of the body, would have
728 8 | insulted me with~pity; like Chateauneuf, who, in the time of Henri
729 16 | acquaintances in the~neighboring chateaus. But the youth had no spirit
730 17 | now played the role of a chatelaine, adored by her vassals~as
731 19 | years of age!"~ ~Her teeth chattered, her eyes were dull and
732 15 | execution, the famous "/Pria che spunti~l'aurora/," which
733 4 | would reply, "that I never cheat except when I~win the trick."~ ~
734 13 | contemplations of~nature; she cheated the aching of her own heart
735 4 | invariably accuse the rector of cheating when he won the basket.~ ~"
736 8 | continued Calyste. "She often~checks the lively, venturesome
737 6 | ages. But the line of the cheek-~bones, though soft, is more
738 2 | formed a net-work over~his cheek-bones and above his eyebrows,
739 6 | to her sister, a nun of~Chelles. Madame de Faucombe, the
740 10 | stuff, chastely~made with a chemisette body and a pleated collar,
741 14 | process~of this natural chemistry, known to them from childhood.
742 7 | head was one of those red~chenille nets, much worn in those
743 9 | windows its ruddy light chequered by the~trees; the air was
744 16 | last days of October the cherished child of the house could~
745 7 | position. A love like that of Cherubin,~had flung him at the feet
746 24 | have chosen~the pawns on my chess-board to carry it out. In the
747 25 | one o'clock, Maxime was chewing a toothpick and talking
748 25 | the Legion of honor, and chief-~justice at Alencon,is that
749 16 | friend, my protector, my chiefbut we loved each other~so!"~ ~"
750 18 | embellishments among their /chiffons;/ out of~these they compose
751 16 | you, in the name of our childish friendship, to take this~
752 18 | from her into the region of chimeras, until~the time when her
753 8 | you~that women with fat chins are exacting in love. She
754 1 | sculptor had just laid~down his chisel. This escutcheon would delight
755 Add | Country Town~The Peasantry~ ~Chocardelle, Mademoiselle~A Prince of
756 25 | female spendthrifts, for the choiceness of their~preparations often
757 14 | demanded, in a voice that was choked by~the tumult of his blood.~ ~"
758 24 | cut in pieces, and would chop up his wife for Beatrix;
759 17 | the world~like an opera chorus. The old men talked of Calyste'
760 2 | The old Vendean, the old Chouan, had, some years previously,
761 Note| Armand Carrel in Michel~Chrestien, and, possibly, Berryer
762 10 | die. You see love such as~Christianity has created it,an ideal
763 1 | saints at the portal of churches. Can you not see~a woman
764 7 | for tea.~ ~"Will you have cigarettes?Ah! I am always forgetting
765 19 | fathers. It isn't by smoking~cigars, playing whist, idling away
766 18 | to an heiress, Berthe de Cinq-Cygne; of~the Vicomte Savinien
767 2 | write, and do some little ciphering; he knew the military~art
768 1 | grand and noble thing? The circlet of a~baronial coronet surmounts
769 10 | thoughtless happiness, like a circling bird darting~down upon a
770 1 | under which foot-passengers circulate, the floor planks~bending
771 5 | limited to geography and the circumspect history of a young ladies'~
772 1 | years and even~these old cities will be transformed and
773 18 | through the commonplace civilities with which even the~most
774 17 | as it disappeared~to the clacking of four whips, more noisy
775 17 | wild acclamations of the clan du~Guenic, a /gars/ of which
776 6 | of~womankind.~ ~Just as Clara Gazul is the female pseudonym
777 24 | loving a noble woman, a Clarissaa great~effort, faith! Love
778 11 | inquisitors; their souls clashed in that rapid glance, and~
779 6 | the great question of the classics and the~romanticists palpitated
780 25 | our primitive clay.~ ~This claw of the beast was rapped,
781 18 | treasures are always armed with~claws and wings."~ ~"I shall make
782 4 | rector did not cross the clean little court-yard alone;
783 1 | arms of the~Guaisnics as clean-cut and clear as though the
784 1 | distinguished. Perhaps a thorough cleaning~might bring out paintings
785 7 | me. Alas! alas! I~have a clear-seeing mind, but a blind heart."~ ~
786 10 | with her soon. Two minds as clear-sighted as hers and mine cannot~
787 12 | its own instinct, to the clear-sightedness~of practised experience.
788 10 | de Kergarouet's~maid, had cleared the table, there was a general
789 8 | in the eyes of her son,~clearer, more beautiful, more living
790 10 | woman to Mariotte, who was clearing the~breakfast-table.~ ~"
791 14 | feet. Into this basin, or~cleft, chance, possibly man, has
792 2 | became so deep~that the clicking of her knitting-needles
793 14 | reefs, to the foot of this cliff, which~rises to a height
794 16 | at St. Petersburg, the climate of which killed her. She~ ~
795 11 | into~the gulf, I, who had climbed to a rock which I thought
796 14 | fortress. Not to be hampered in climbing by women's clothing,~she
797 22 | was the last nail which clinched the fetters of that happy~
798 3 | called a monopolist, and clinging to those grain-sacks obstinately.
799 22 | the antechamber with her clogs,~coming in about the time
800 6 | events of her life, like a~cloistered nun.~ ~At the beginning
801 6 | they are usually~short, close-knit, well set-up and firm, except
802 9 | Calyste~trembled until on closer view he saw they were a
803 9 | always denoted in him the closest observation. He never~ceased
804 17 | heir to their ducal title;~Clotilde-Frederique, the second daughter, desired
805 8 | blue, once brilliant, are clouded now~by some hidden pain,
806 1 | thought, give four leaves to clover, while Christian art is~
807 11 | Both were gazing into a clump of trees with a stupefied
808 19 | you~have behaved in such a clumsy manner that Sabine has guessed
809 24 | ask point-blank for his co-operation before~replying.~ ~"Madame,
810 8 | Duc~de Lorraine, a live coal in my hand? Are there no
811 2 | cotillon/, or short skirt of coarse cloth,~over a quilted petticoat (
812 10 | placed high above~all vulgar coarseness, to which two creatures
813 1 | in 1365, the key~of the coast, which may boast, not less
814 14 | narrow~valleys. Neither the coasts of Croisic, where the granite
815 22 | these good seeds with a coating of~salt, and she now gave
816 11 | her friend and began to coax her prettily.~ ~"You have
817 16 | to tempt~him out with the coaxing wisdom of an old man.~ ~"
818 6 | receiving~emissaries of Pitt and Coburg. The 9th Thermidor released
819 2 | the terrible grub of the cockchafer; then, as soon as it was~
820 6 | beside the throat, like the coif of the statues at Memphis,
821 1 | globe through its own length~coiled like a tape-worm in a surgeon'
822 7 | days, through which the coils of her~black hair shone,
823 6 | ages, the last of which coincides with the mournful~period
824 16 | petticoat which was full of gold coins.~ ~Mademoiselle de Pen-Hoel
825 15 | Camille, after exchanging the coldest of salutations with his~
826 25 | together, relying on the collaboration~of the celebrated author,
827 2 | cotillon/, adorned with a collarette of many~pleats, the washing
828 7 | appeared to him, in all its collective~magnificence, its criticising
829 6 | outline, seems to belong to a colossal woman. The arms are~vigorously
830 16 | defending the old~sailor, combated.~ ~"I shall lecture Calyste
831 20 | powerful of all natures, combined.~Savinien de Portenduere
832 8 | their blood; they are born~comedians, braggarts; extravagant
833 14 | the bounteous mother, the comforter of troubled spirits, with~
834 13 | where you will find all the comforts of life, and where~Conti
835 12 | Kergarouet, the~chevalier's commanding officer. The present Thisbe
836 12 | weary you to death; but~I do commend you to some divine young
837 2 | These hands were a living commentary on the~noble motto to which
838 1 | Venetian school depraved by its commerce with~the East, where the
839 14 | and she suffered him to~commiserate her for being bound to an
840 Add | Blamont-Chauvry, Marquise d'~The Commission in Lunacy~A Distinguished
841 5 | tenets of her sex. A~woman commits a sin in even going to a
842 1 | horseback, most of them with commodities for~barter in sacks. They
843 6 | filled with disgust for the~commonplaces of conversation, the silliness
844 16 | Calyste~made, a singular commotion stirred within him, as if
845 6 | spectacle. The political commotions, the glamour of that theatrical~
846 8 | suppose that I am capable of communicating my sad~knowledge of him
847 7 | for herself only; she was communing~with her own being.~ ~Instead
848 1 | the~factotum of this large community. He went and came when he
849 14 | the growth of a box-plant, compact, well-nourished, and sown,
850 16 | thought, and avoiding all companionship.~ ~Soon after the day when
851 14 | I have had no~happiness comparable to that which we have just
852 6 | apparitions at Les Touches excited comparatively little interest. Her~Parisian
853 14 | who are in a position to compare them with~other great spectacles
854 3 | the storm, the~eye that compassed the sea, the courage, indomitable,
855 17 | all others; it involves compatibility of temper,~physical sympathies,
856 21 | the deceits of the~world compel us to commit. Leave me now,
857 17 | by my own self. Make me compensation,~then, for all those pangs,
858 10 | mademoiselle, have so many~compensations."~ ~The tears came into
859 8 | adversary it~was attempting to compete, or what amount of fortune
860 22 | enter into one~great solemn competition, it would be fine; but you
861 22 | those~young men and the complacent good-nature with which Monsieur
862 17 | and our feelings by noble compliances, let us~endeavor to be to
863 13 | her quiver. Camille smoked composedly as she listened to a furious~
864 8 | the pecuniary gains~which composers obtain in Paris. Here's
865 14 | has here amused itself by composing interminable~arabesques
866 14 | all the world! Take your composing-~draught, my dear friend,
867 10 | thought it.~Which of your compositions do you prefer?"~ ~"I find
868 6 | such a life could never be comprehended in Guerande; in~fact, to
869 12 | the need of some help in comprehending it~more clearly, and also
870 24 | shrewd, penetrating, astute, comprehensive~glances by which such great
871 7 | furniture~of the dining-room comprises four great buffets, also
872 26 | typography, in which she compromised herself so completely~that
873 11 | delicate I do not wish to compromiseI will not~say my reputation,
874 22 | fatal example of some of her comrades like herself without~resources,
875 8 | lurks beneath the~warmest comradeship. Conti has not the courage
876 26 | also by that desire for concealment which characterizes~the
877 8 | the~right side is easily conceivable. The task was an attractive
878 11 | All Calyste's life was concentrated in the short moment of the
879 13 | virtues sang in her soul a concert of praise and self-~approval.~ ~
880 6 | evening, to Les Touches, concluded that Mademoiselle Felicite
881 17 | Rochefide." In 1842 this concluding paragraph was suppressed
882 18 | a syllogism~which draws conclusions from this external science
883 13 | calmness of her adversary,~condescended even to personalities on
884 23 | defect was~the vanity which condescends to lie for the sake of magnifying
885 20 | accustoms him to all sorts of condiments."~ ~She bought the English
886 6 | 1817. Women who know the conditions of temperament and happiness
887 24 | interrupting this modern~condottiere, and showing on her countenance
888 11 | alone preserve him to~me. I confess to you, with the cowardice
889 25 | trifle, unworthy of being confessed to an uncle; he would~disinherit
890 21 | we are not now in~the confessional; I am not obliged to make
891 14 | Camille had told him,~was confident that Conti would be enchanted
892 4 | the old lady answered, confidentially, the~remarks of the chevalier
893 13 | last blow.~ ~"I am more confiding and less bitter than you,"
894 8 | extinct, it touches the confines of hoarseness and~extinction.
895 12 | in it like the glare of a~conflagration.~ ~Calyste to Madame la
896 10 | shall regret not witnessing~conflicts of passion of a kind so
897 17 | That~one/ seemed to me more conformable than the first to the demands~
898 18 | honey-moon~had not altogether conformed to the legal requirements
899 14 | her inward sufferings by confronting some imaginary~peril.~ ~
900 10 | offering his arm.~ ~Both were confused; she by his coldness, he
901 9 | Calyste heard the words~confusedly. He seated himself in an
902 15 | knew all, and was ready to congratulate her on~her new happiness.
903 22 | herself without~resources, who congratulated themselves on their decision.
904 20 | Zephirine and I are lost in~conjectures about the dressing-table
905 7 | only by the beaches which connect it with the~village of Batz (
906 1 | battle" was the praise of the Connetable /par~excellence/, the great
907 1 | the house of France, which connoisseurs find~inescutcheoned in the
908 19 | more fruitful with men~of a conquering nature. To such natures
909 9 | family, allied to William the Conqueror," he replied.~"They bear
910 2 | nor complaints of their conquerors. Such silence is a trait
911 19 | all-powerful because it conquers her repugnance." If~you
912 6 | without debts and without conquests. Encouraged by success,
913 26 | the chief-justiceship.~She consents that we shall live with
914 10 | horrified at the thought of the~consequences of such a passion at your
915 16 | worn out at last by~fatigue consequent on this spasm of exertion,
916 18 | the windows resembling~conservatories, with abundant flowers in
917 3 | girls, would have lost it considerably~had she seen him entangled
918 22 | race-horses, through a series of considerations which she no doubt~derived
919 7 | There are some~superb, consistent natures who say at a certain
920 9 | Calyste's face, and tried to console him with a look of sympathy.~
921 18 | coverings, the magnificent consoles, on one of~which was a curious
922 12 | dear Beatrix, be kind, be consoling to me. When victims~were
923 4 | during the rise and fall of consols.~ ~By a certain diplomatic
924 18 | whom~grandeur and delicacy consonant with their own does not
925 14 | write~it here, its Breton consonants being as difficult to pronounce
926 20 | This enabled Gasselin to consort with Madame de~Rochefide'
927 23 | wit, had formed a plan of consorting with clever celebrities
928 26 | preparation."~ ~The two conspirators entered the salon together,
929 Add | Seaside Tragedy~ ~Canalis, Constant-Cyr-Melchior, Baron de~Letters of Two
930 8 | Charlemagne, Belisarious, and Constantine are noted exceptions to
931 26 | all women who have been constellations in the world and whom~love
932 13 | peculiar to~Frenchwomen, which constitute the celebrated coquetry
933 18 | retain some clay in~their constitutions; the slough still pleases
934 22 | appearance, to which husbands are constrained, his house, in~which since
935 11 | was alone, the author, the constructor of dramas, gave~place to
936 8 | criticism demolishes, it~never constructs. Thus his lassitude is that
937 3 | that the old woman could~construe as looking to her fortune.
938 1 | once as personal to the consumer as to the artisan.~Nowadays
939 16 | see all the symptoms of consumption, that most horrible disease
940 26 | what they were likely to contain, having learned that you
941 6 | she wanted, as it~were, to contemplate herself after her great
942 11 | before the window, smoking, contemplating in turn the~marshes, the
943 10 | him fully from his torpid contemplation~of the future. Before he
944 13 | she had taken of late to contemplations of~nature; she cheated the
945 12 | that infinite love which contents itself with the duties of~
946 3 | existence or whose power is contested by their parishioners, and
947 17 | only in making her life~a continual offering, as that of man
948 6 | This nose is an admirable continuation of the forehead, with~which
949 20 | blonde, but I know if this continues I shall soon be thirty-five
950 8 | are~never remarkable for continuous effort or creative activity.~
951 15 | extreme youth that these contractions of the bodily functions~
952 22 | the rest~did not dare to contradict them.~ ~This system Arthur
953 11 | Beatrix became cold and hard, contradictory in tone, epigrammatic, and~
954 25 | effect of that great law of~contraries, which produces so many
955 3 | worried by the slightest /contretemps/, speaking low to~spare
956 19 | and aunt Zephirine have~contributed."~ ~Sabine clasped him in
957 18 | premature ruins by the cleverest contrivances of the /article Paris/.~
958 2 | one ever heard a word of contumely from~the baron's lips about
959 13 | sphinx, but don't propound conundrums. Speak out, plainly,~my
960 20 | s groom, who had fallen~conveniently ill. This enabled Gasselin
961 4 | By a certain diplomatic convention, dating from September,
962 6 | regulated by all social conventions.~Her friendships seemed
963 6 | her passions far more than conventual life would have done;~for
964 11 | us, if you havenot a long conversationbut a mere exchange~of words
965 8 | world; they know how to converse; they can call up the whole
966 26 | mile-stone.~ ~The marquise conversed with the ease of a Celimene,
967 11 | garden path beside the~lawn, conversing as they walked.~ ~"If the
968 1 | facing the dunes~had been converted one hundred years earlier
969 1 | There is no other~public conveyance than the springless wagon
970 6 | The ears are~delicately convoluted,a sign of secret refinement.
971 17 | In a few minutes the gay convoy had reached the esplanade
972 12 | marrying! the very thought convulses my heart.~Is there another
973 15 | XV CONTI~The inward and convulsive trembling of the marquise
974 14 | marquise tremble~under it convulsively, with passionate joy. At
975 20 | perfumes poison, the choicest cookery scrapes~their throat like
976 20 | little trifles of love.~ ~The cooking trouble lasted nearly a
977 21 | of course~see life more coolly than you can see it. Love
978 18 | sister, who saw in Calyste's~coolness an effect of his English
979 11 | You are wholly unable to cope with her; will you~promise
980 6 | the desert, kissed by a~Coptic sun. The tones of the skin
981 8 | Felicite showed Calyste a fine copy of a picture by Mieris,
982 14 | art are always~the timid copying of effects of nature), a
983 22 | second floor in the rue Coquenard, and set himself to study
984 15 | majesty; she will certainly coquet with you, if only to tease~
985 9 | How can you expect her to coquette with Calyste? She~is never
986 20 | When Rubini sang~/Il mio cor si divide/, she rushed away.
987 18 | between a mollusk and a bit of coral, dares to call~itself Beatrix, /
988 1 | vegetables, bordered with cordons of fruit-~trees, which the
989 1 | condition as that of the Cordova leather, but a few red flowers
990 13 | genuine; she felt to the very core of~her being the same terrible
991 19 | everybody writes nowadays on coroneted paper; even~our stewards
992 10 | on the scene very much as Corporal Trim produces his cap in~"
993 6 | struggling with all Europe on the corpse of France. Her removal to~
994 6 | carriage of the head is corrected by the mobility~of the lips,
995 6 | passion, or to speak more correctly, one of~those manias which
996 6 | partly from her own~wit, the correctness of her judgments, and the
997 1 | corner tower. This tower corresponds in the design~of the facade
998 26 | as to meet no one in the corridors. Beatrix, on these~occasions,
999 14 | dried by the salt sea winds, corroded by the spray, where~a fruitless
1000 12 | young men not tainted~by corruption such a letter is written
1001 11 | his heart away from all corruptions, all ideas of~knowledge,
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