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1002 22 | which allowed this weak corvette to attach its grapnels~securely
1003 21 | the regal Macedonian with cosmopolitan love! We are thanked for
1004 19 | and rare plants of the costliest luxury. The~science of nothings,
1005 8 | other, she could wear the costume of the time when~women had
1006 3 | last six years the rector coughed~when he came to the crucial
1007 2 | to that noble ruin. The countenancea little material,~perhaps,
1008 21 | and I have made a vownot counting a novenato give twelve~hundred
1009 24 | Germany,in short, all possible countries."~ ~"Ah! you confirm a fear
1010 8 | disturbance at her husband's~country-place, where she was bored like
1011 7 | eyes of the ignorant~young countryman, the riches of a new world;
1012 1 | a little feudal State,a county or~duchy conquered by the
1013 17 | Touches, which are: party couped, tranche and taille~or and
1014 17 | chasseur/, who acted as~courier, and in the rumble were
1015 16 | opposite windows of the court-~yard and garden. She reminded
1016 21 | priests in Paris, crossed the courtyard of the~hotel de Grandlieu,
1017 25 | he had lived miserably,~covering his deficits with an audacity
1018 19 | three looked at one another covertly. Calyste turned as~red as
1019 6 | comedies~which passion, covetousness, and ambition make the generality
1020 11 | see women making fuel~with cow-dung, which they nail against
1021 18 | her or by me.~Men are all cowards in their treatment of women.
1022 17 | windows are gates and the cows grace peacefully on the
1023 1 | great~architect. This rich, coy nature, so untrodden, with
1024 3 | gravel in the court-yard crackled under the discreet footsteps
1025 10 | birthplace, at least her cradle. The viscountess,~therefore,
1026 11 | deceitful confessions, crafty confidences, by which one~
1027 18 | to my means; and there I cram my head with~literaturebut
1028 6 | girls run riot. A brain crammed~with knowledge that was
1029 14 | little~shawl of crimson China crape, crossed on her bosom and
1030 18 | fabrics, of silken gauze~and craped hair, of vivacity, calmness,
1031 19 | her arms, her~nose at his cravat, abandoned to her joy, she
1032 12 | they cannot win the love we crave.~Sometimes I do not understand
1033 15 | feminine royalty~that she craved; they had not enabled her
1034 10 | Calyste.~ ~"Hide! are you crazy, monsieur? Why, we are on
1035 19 | shows us the unseen, and creates belief in mental beings,
1036 8 | for continuous effort or creative activity.~Charlemagne, Belisarious,
1037 9 | at this~moment what its creator intended, a poem of divine
1038 24 | from the depths of such~credulity! Ah! madame, Shakespeare'
1039 14 | upon one of~those charming creeks where the waves deposit
1040 25 | white and warm as that of Creoles, to a face full of~spirited
1041 9 | to the pale tints of her creped~curls, so arranged as to
1042 12 | imagination, to~help him across crevasses. The rest of this artless
1043 19 | lie; have~the courage of a criminal, and his impudence. I have
1044 14 | wreath~of blue-bells, her crimped hair fluffy beneath it,
1045 25 | which produces so many crises in the human heart and~accounts
1046 7 | collective~magnificence, its criticising spirit, its desires for
1047 13 | recognized the~truth of certain criticisms upon your nature, of which
1048 17 | etc.~ ~Many bourgeois critics unjustly deny the innocence
1049 4 | this."~ ~In raising and crooking his arm to imitate the dog,
1050 3 | overthrow of succession of crops, ruin under the name of~
1051 1 | of each~window with its crossbars of stone, still grinds,
1052 7 | skirts the road to Croisic, crosses the~road, and is lost in
1053 2 | the perils of~his five crossings through a turbulent sea
1054 18 | learning that Sabine~feared the croup, and was watching for the
1055 14 | triumphs~of art, no applause of crowds stirred by my genius to
1056 1 | engagistes/ (tenants of crown-lands) before the year~1789. Where
1057 23 | paintings, for Fabien's crowning defect was~the vanity which
1058 14 | is willing~to accept the cruellest remedy and submits to the
1059 10 | his coldness, he by his cruelty, as they~walked up the sort
1060 1 | the carvings of which have crumbled~under the salty vapors of
1061 1 | was in the days when the crusaders of the~Christian world invented
1062 15 | her self-love, she will crush him like a~worm under her
1063 7 | little paths of white salt crust, along~which the salt-makers
1064 26 | weights~you've carried! what cuffs you've given!"~ ~"La Palferine
1065 14 | girdle of green earth richly cultivated, produced an~effect that
1066 8 | knows his weakness, and cultivates an appearance of sincerity;
1067 14 | sandy dunes, which injure cultivation, and stretch~as far as Batz.
1068 1 | year, in spite of~ignorant culture. The du Gaisnics remain
1069 26 | portrait,~and wants mine. If Cupid looked at hers he would
1070 7 | head-board surmounted by~Cupids scattering flowers, and
1071 1 | five~sides, ending in a cupola in which is a bell-turret,
1072 21 | advance. If Calyste is not cured of her in three months I
1073 6 | would~be to satisfy many curiosities and do justice to one of
1074 10 | sewing by~the light of the curiously constructed lamp while she
1075 2 | braided the short locks curling on the nape~of her neckwhich
1076 2 | his guests uttered neither curses~nor complaints of their
1077 10 | back, thin arms, and the curt, decided manner of a~provincial
1078 17 | noticed clouds, suddenly and~curtly refused to accept the benefactions
1079 5 | offering no explanation.~ ~The curtness of this answer brought clouds
1080 6 | low, giving it a centre~curve which emphasizes its natural
1081 2 | hand, the fingers of which~curved slightly backward, their
1082 6 | curving inward at the nape, curves out in a line that~unites
1083 10 | with weary sadness on a cushion. "I am tired of life, but
1084 7 | her head lying back on the cushions,~her eyes, stupid with thought,
1085 10 | seats were engaged by the custom-~house," said the conductor
1086 24 | her that king of~political cut-throats, the celebrated Comte Maxime
1087 7 | analyzed her feelings as Cuvier and Dupuytren explained
1088 7 | circular window opens its cyclopic eye, westerly to the sea,~
1089 23 | Gobenheim, Vermanton a cynical~philosopher, all frequenters
1090 12 | believe in the Amadis and the Cyrus~of my dreams. To-day true
1091 25 | asleep, "after to-day I have d-o-n-e with~him."~ ~Fabien caught
1092 17 | maternal eloquence of a~female Daedelus has had the fate of all
1093 22 | overwhelmed with presents and dainties and pocket-money~the child
1094 1 | gable above depends a stone dais like those that~crown the
1095 2 | his garden, where weed~or damaging insect was never seen. Sometimes
1096 22 | The situation of these dames is determined by that which
1097 15 | her flight; the sword of~Damocles was not suspended over her
1098 3 | heat of the sun, or the dampness of the~misty atmosphere,
1099 20 | took him in her arms to dance him. The child, just~awakened,
1100 19 | club directors are such dandies!"~ ~The Vicomte de Portenduere
1101 16 | both father and son were so~dangerously ill that the family were
1102 3 | garments.~She always wore, dangling from one side, the bunch
1103 Note| and, possibly, Berryer in Daniel d'Arthez. But in the~present
1104 25 | audacity equal to that of Danton. But he~now paid his debts;
1105 12 | heart, and its hot wave~darkens my intellect, weakens my
1106 2 | echoes slumbering among the darksome~walls of the ancient house.
1107 13 | marquise colored high; she darted a look of hatred, a venomous~
1108 9 | within their breasts and darts outwardly about them, like
1109 18 | be spontaneous, free, the~dash of an impetuous torrent
1110 12 | many of those points and dashes of which~modern literature
1111 16 | the waves were playing and dashing their white foam. Calyste
1112 1 | concerned~with facts and dates than with the truer history
1113 4 | certain diplomatic convention, dating from September, 1825, when~
1114 19 | I don't know if there's daylight; I doubt the sun. I've such
1115 17 | the short space of a few~daysI might even say a few hours!
1116 25 | you? No, you must go, and dazzle,~and conquer. My good mate,
1117 14 | excursion. For a moment he was dazzled and giddy.~These little
1118 18 | heightened here and there with dead-gold silken trimmings, the~floor
1119 17 | the Guenics!" till I was deafened; after balls, where~the
1120 19 | presumptive of the Guenics is dearer to me than ever, and I wanted
1121 21 | some hidden trouble.~ ~"My dears, it is midnight; come, go
1122 21 | feel that I have got my death-blow. My pride is only a~sham
1123 18 | for Madame de~Rochefide's deathah, heavens! a natural death,
1124 14 | should not have said no to deathbut suffering!" she murmured
1125 23 | marrying her, that folly seemed debatable to a bachelor of thirty-~
1126 9 | hesitations, the tender debatings, the absence of all~calculation,
1127 25 | published in the~"Journal des Debats" a novelette which won him
1128 8 | distinguished minds; her debauches will~be in music and her
1129 1 | morals were to change every decade. If you do not now expect
1130 1 | veneered with slate. Wood, now~decaying, counts for much in the
1131 11 | feints, false~generosities, deceitful confessions, crafty confidences,
1132 21 | the venial sins which the deceits of the~world compel us to
1133 24 | I love is~infamous; she deceives me, she will deceive me;
1134 18 | young household to Paris in December, 1838.~Sabine installed
1135 5 | is not a respectable or decent~house. Its mistress leads
1136 18 | young girls. But that's a deceptive~Utopia; better have one'
1137 8 | a scene; he~stormed, he declaimed, he depicted his love, declaring
1138 10 | in spite of the terrible declarations of the~preceding night.
1139 9 | Claude, always sarcastic,~declares that you will play Bice
1140 23 | parasitic~organizations reveal decomposition; are they not the swarming
1141 17 | rue de Bourbon was~being decorated, and she intended it for
1142 4 | spent quite a fortune in~decorating Les Touches in a most improper
1143 7 | carefully avoiding all splendid decoration. The salon, painted gray,~
1144 3 | nevertheless, a priestly decorum. His gaiety, that of a man
1145 14 | Sardinia, where Nature is~dedicated to grandiose and terrible
1146 6 | her silence and by that deep-reaching glance of intense fixity.
1147 24 | the blows of an axe, far deeper treachery, and so base an~
1148 2 | whatever the game might be,deer, hare, or a bird on the
1149 23 | paintings, for Fabien's crowning defect was~the vanity which condescends
1150 11 | o'clock. There were two defections, the~baron and the chevalier,
1151 16 | hour of~the glorious old defender of the monarchy, he knelt
1152 6 | of the palace, among the defenders of the king, near whose~
1153 16 | opinions which her aunt, defending the old~sailor, combated.~ ~"
1154 15 | herself prudently on the~defensive; she had betrayed neither
1155 4 | the chevalier made~up the deficiency, being accused by the rest
1156 25 | miserably,~covering his deficits with an audacity equal to
1157 23 | ones in the image of the defunct. These parasitic~organizations
1158 13 | provincial witcheries which degenerate usually~into teasing.~ ~"
1159 22 | the state of neglect and degradation which reigned in the~hotel
1160 26 | once and forever into the~degradations of vice,though it is possible
1161 22 | theatres trade in artists; you degrade an institution to a~gambling
1162 24 | are you ignorant of the degree of blindness to which Madame
1163 14 | could resist such constant deification. Beatrix felt herself~sure
1164 1 | the Rohans without having~deigned to make themselves princes,
1165 8 | might almost deceive the Deity. You will be entrapped,
1166 15 | bidding her good-night in deep dejection.~ ~He returned home, found
1167 16 | which slowly made their way, delayed by wrinkles,~along his cheeks,
1168 6 | upon the face. The ears are~delicately convoluted,a sign of secret
1169 6 | related~her betrayed and deluded love in a short novel, one
1170 18 | Ah! if my terrors are not~delusions, Camille Maupin has sold
1171 19 | seekers after~knowledge, all delvers into secrets, repulsed through
1172 6 | see~the shadowy line of demarcation which separates nearly every
1173 23 | resolves~to lead. She had, so democrats declare, an evil in her
1174 8 | pickaxe of his criticism demolishes, it~never constructs. Thus
1175 22 | Certainly the Rat,~accused of demolishing fortunes which frequently
1176 8 | convictions.~He is a seer, a demon, a god, an angel. Calyste,
1177 18 | see you," said Beatrix, demurely. "I said to myself~when
1178 23 | apartment, he called it his /den/. The~provincial took care
1179 15 | with false assertions and~denials, which he will simply make
1180 14 | her, did not /love!/~He denied your right to test our hearts,
1181 9 | upon~Camille which always denoted in him the closest observation.
1182 16 | shudders at regular intervals, denoting fever. His~eyes, surrounded
1183 10 | you will"~ ~"Ah! does it depend wholly on the will? I shouldn'
1184 14 | Calyste's arm~in languid dependence.~ ~"Ah! my dear, you are
1185 1 | and without this minute depicting of the~house, the surprising
1186 14 | never seen anything that~so depicts the burning barrenness of
1187 24 | other rival in elegance, deportment, and~wit than the illustrious
1188 7 | cried. "How can I heedlessly deprave your~girlish innocence!
1189 7 | mind for~the strange and depressing sight of the marshes and
1190 16 | discussed his greater or less~depression as they walked home together.
1191 23 | Norman, the gain he~could derive from this public vice. Every
1192 7 | estate is really in Guerande) derives an income~from the marshes
1193 22 | about him, the stage of deriving vanity from his~mistress (
1194 9 | the marquise pass.~ ~The descent of that ancient staircase
1195 8 | them often; her nose, which describes one-~quarter of a circle,
1196 22 | Beatrix inexcusable for~deserting the best fellow on earth,
1197 12 | understood, adored as you deserve to be?~ ~Let me tell you
1198 18 | you once loved meyouas I deserved~to be loved by him who has
1199 1 | like an English garden, designed by some great~architect.
1200 9 | keepsakes" which English~designers and engravers seek so persistently.
1201 19 | was mastered by one~mad desireto have certainty:~ ~To Madame
1202 26 | sentiments, I am, above all, desirous to say to you, that although
1203 20 | laid the paper on Calyste's desk.~ ~Calyste found the letter
1204 26 | but at the same time she despatched to La~Palferine the following
1205 8 | comprehend all by~thought, he despises materialities; and yet,
1206 2 | in Dublin the old Breton, despite~his fifty years, had fallen
1207 12 | of my desires, with~the despotic sternness of twenty years.
1208 13 | emotions, jealousies, and despotisms. I am not an author; it~
1209 6 | abandonment of those whom Nature destines for maternity; their gait
1210 15 | constancy; nothing ever detached them from their first lover,
1211 8 | spite of the~precocious deteriorations of a face once magnificent,
1212 22 | one young woman with~the determination to remain in her own home,
1213 25 | his little~Aurelie and his detestation of his wife, to start the
1214 16 | worthy man had formerly detested her, he now admired~her,
1215 4 | cupidity~natural to mankind develops in it; so does diplomatic
1216 3 | their mailed hand and their~device were carved upon the key-stone
1217 18 | that of angels and that of devils) Beatrix~was redolent of
1218 14 | were, upon the~strangely devious waylike the tortuous rocky
1219 18 | we love we are~creatures devoid of common-sense, and this
1220 8 | sweet by-paths moist~with dew; never stand beneath the
1221 2 | and~refreshing with the dews of heaven.~ ~The baroness
1222 10 | the road which is shaded, dewy, and verdant as a forest~
1223 9 | modern music. The passage /Di tanti palpiti/ expresses
1224 25 | first to have the courage to diagnose.~In one, it is a last reflexion
1225 17 | all buzzing in the Breton dialect!in short,~after a most grotesque
1226 6 | the brow of the~hunting Diana, a powerful and determined
1227 9 | extreme; the forehead seemed diaphanous. The head, so sweet and~
1228 18 | yielded to no weakness.~ ~"Dictate what I ought to write,"
1229 12 | of the world, might have~dictated.~ ~ ~
1230 8 | like those lovers seen by Diderot; never take, like the Duc~
1231 8 | chair, like the sister of Dido in Guerin's~picture, and
1232 19 | You~alone shall know why I dieI am betrayed! at the end
1233 1 | rocks than at Boulogne or Dieppe) is still an immense event.
1234 6 | knowledge that was neither digested nor classed governed the~
1235 23 | the~youth of the day. The digression is history.~ ~In 1838, Fabien
1236 6 | oblique nostrils, passionately~dilated at times, and showing the
1237 14 | weather, and faces southerly, diluvian caprice has constructed~
1238 18 | wound about her throat to~diminish its length, and partly conceal
1239 16 | and pale; his strength was diminishing, and he was conscious at~
1240 8 | by such compliance. The dinner-~table presented that rich
1241 8 | abandons his outer man with Diogenic~indifference. Satisfied
1242 8 | have placed themselves in direct opposition to~society? I
1243 12 | looking at the letter, but not~directly asking for it.~ ~Calyste
1244 19 | elegance."~ ~"Those club directors are such dandies!"~ ~The
1245 8 | Still, there are great~disadvantages for a woman in the position
1246 26 | all we have that is most disagreeable in our~business. 'You are
1247 25 | owe your fortune to her disappointment. You had better not leave
1248 12 | which come to us from cruel disappointments. Happiness has its~insolence,
1249 4 | herself), would be cold and~disapproving, and lecture the girl: she
1250 6 | herself after her great disaster. She wrote to~Paris to have
1251 6 | which~Camille has never disavowed, enforce the questions suggested
1252 14 | the point where~the boats discharge the salt, which the peasant-women
1253 18 | complexion faded and almost discolored, her~eyes hollow with deep
1254 13 | that thought a horrible discomposure overspread~her face and
1255 12 | or seeming in the least disconcerted, slip the~letter into her
1256 20 | Calyste looked about him discontentedly; he had stayed at~home!
1257 14 | Croisic, the two women were discoursing one~evening about love,
1258 20 | impossible for her to make such discoveries in all the~preparations
1259 25 | glitter. La Palferine was, discreetly, the first to withdraw;~
1260 8 | marquise, as observing, as discriminating? Your~dear Beatrix is held
1261 16 | and Charlotte's aunt, who discussed his greater or less~depression
1262 14 | always~over-excited when she discusses; let her be angry and ill-treat
1263 4 | events in~the town, or by discussions on public events. Sometimes
1264 8 | than the lower, which drops disdainfully. Her pale~cheeks have no
1265 16 | provinces, saw nothing fatal~or diseased about the lad. The two old
1266 10 | to-day it puts into my soul a disenchantment~which will plunge me forever
1267 1 | the~same alteration which disfigures that of du Guaisqlain. The
1268 8 | his harem of books to~read disgusts him with real work. Indifferent
1269 8 | Gennaro reaches the most~dishevelled pathos that any German professor
1270 22 | various writers, poor but dishonest, clever~but deeply in debt;
1271 11 | reveal them? They~would dishonor her sex, humiliate its virtues,
1272 15 | imperiously demanded, so dishonoring to~the new love, overwhelmed
1273 4 | was born in Brittany! She dishonors her land. I shall preach
1274 6 | stay was after her first disillusion in 1818. The house was~uninhabitable,
1275 26 | so many revelations and disillusionments.~ ~"Yes, in the serpent'
1276 24 | recoil before the most awful~disillusions. You are too virtuous to
1277 26 | XXVI DISILLUSIONSIN ALL BUT LA FONTAINE'S FABLES~
1278 25 | confessed to an uncle; he would~disinherit me for such a paltry sum,
1279 1 | if the male~line failed. Disinherited from active life, these
1280 22 | Aurelie began by showing a disinterestedness equal to her other~charms,
1281 3 | innovations. She might~have disinterred a little gold to pay for
1282 1 | The granite~steps are now disjointed, grasses have forced their
1283 19 | flattery in~the guise of dislike. A man then says to himself, "
1284 6 | that majestic face may have dismayed. The upper lip is thin,
1285 21 | certainly induce her to dismiss my son-~in-law."~ ~"My daughter,"
1286 25 | see you to-morrow."~ ~A dismissal which he took in good part.~ ~"
1287 14 | lectured Calyste on his disobedience, explaining to him clearly
1288 13 | boldness.~ ~"If you have disobeyed me, all will be lost, through
1289 7 | serious states of illness or disorder. The fancies of women are
1290 18 | you/ at least~would not disown me. Ah! my Calyste," she
1291 2 | speak, which allowed him to~dispense with thought. His duty,
1292 19 | of furniture, but for the dispersion of her first dark~doubt.
1293 1 | stones which~centuries have displaced without however lessening
1294 20 | What is there~here that displeases you?" she asked.~ ~"These
1295 26 | intellect, she is supremely~displeasing to me as a woman."~ ~"And
1296 14 | listen, without even acted~displeasure, to the talk of the youth'
1297 22 | After having tasted the~displeasures of marriage he was so content
1298 17 | years old, was the~only disposable daughter left. It was Sabine
1299 16 | been holding at Calyste's disposition,~as he knows very well."~ ~
1300 2 | were the fortunes of~the dispossessed Elder branch. The future
1301 2 | of which caused the only dispute she ever had with~her sister-in-law,
1302 12 | which, until then, I had~disputed with all my youth, with
1303 14 | horror of any love which~disregards the world and religion.
1304 13 | am too frank to hide my dissatisfaction. No~one has ever given or
1305 9 | symmetry.~This neck, so dissimilar to that of Camille, was
1306 8 | Gennaro was compelled to dissimulate; and he~did it admirably.
1307 19 | who was making progress in~dissimulation, "I must get out of it by
1308 1 | the ornamentation would dissipate them. The trefoils of the~
1309 3 | she would have thought him dissipated, and declared him a~spendthrift.
1310 2 | his kind, for~action, not dissipating it on useless things which
1311 3 | it be that the fashion of~dissipation is contagious? I see that
1312 18 | comes to the support of the~dissipations of young men. A wife is
1313 2 | fire; then she fetched her distaff, her~ball of thread, and
1314 11 | of~neither obstacles, nor distances, nor the existence even
1315 2 | household were extremely distasteful,one who,~like other fine
1316 1 | to have no signs and no distinctions, and whose manners and~morals
1317 1 | of purchasing the jewels distinctive of~their caste which are
1318 6 | dazzling by candlelight, which distinguishes a~beautiful Italian; you
1319 6 | fears to find the strange distortion of an~abnormal soul. Do
1320 8 | young woman has a thousand~distractions; these women have none.
1321 21 | of~moral revelation, so distraught was she by her woe.~ ~The
1322 6 | felt at this episode. Her distress was~perceived by a friend,
1323 25 | had excellent reasons for distrusting old men.~ ~"Have you debts?"
1324 8 | time of the revolutionary disturbance at her husband's~country-place,
1325 13 | of triumph about Beatrix disturbed her. No woman gains an~advantage
1326 25 | again listened to Sabine's dithyrambics~inlaid with family facts
1327 20 | salons; the silk of the divans is jute in their eyes, exotic~
1328 8 | brown things of a precious diversity; there are a hundred ways
1329 17 | Breton, who was~insensibly diverted from his own thoughts by
1330 14 | grow in that arid desert,~dividing them significantly with
1331 18 | He cursed the power of divination which love had~bestowed
1332 8 | unless I can adore~the divineness I see everywhere,in those
1333 2 | soul sound lingers like a~divining echo, read books in which
1334 12 | nothing is changed but my divinity. I was a pagan;~I am now
1335 23 | political life, the~three great divisions of the social /I;/ namely,
1336 22 | papers on which a void is divulged~by the words, /Apartments
1337 8 | intellectual part in the new doctrines, which~swarmed, during the
1338 2 | to France to obtain the documents necessary for his~marriage,
1339 19 | started up like a frightened doe, and walked~about the salon
1340 21 | monotonous;~some men prefer their doll's wax made of rouge and
1341 1 | sacrificing men upon their dolmens. Useless to say~what they
1342 11 | thought, made Calyste~almost doltish. Often he would sit for
1343 17 | the tenants of the vast domains of the house of Guenic,
1344 1 | its summit is a small open dome,~beneath which stands a
1345 18 | eyes are tinted with the~dominant thought,they love or they
1346 10 | not slept;~but the brow dominated the inward storm with cold
1347 3 | came to the crucial words, /Domine, salvum fac regem/.~Politics
1348 9 | passengers but their~horses, donkeys, baggages, and merchandise
1349 15 | handsomest of our prima-~donnas, Mademoiselle Falcon of
1350 26 | left her fortune, would doom him to~penury.~ ~But Calyste,
1351 4 | Mademoiselle de Pen-Hoel's door-step,~and her page had gone in,
1352 7 | two gables and two large~dormer windows on each side of
1353 8 | distinction, is getting doubled, but without~dignity. His
1354 9 | and agility of a~chamois, doubling like a hare that he might
1355 12 | truly that I~could wish you doubly shamed if so my love might
1356 4 | stake; they believedthey doubtedbut, after all, the~chevalier
1357 22 | courtesan, persuaded to that doubtful future by~the fatal example
1358 14 | had gained a truce, he not doubting of his~happiness; and both
1359 25 | irruption into the nest of the dove of the~rue de Chartres,
1360 26 | Palferine to enter her carriage.~Doves can be Robespierres in spite
1361 2 | Rembrandt,~Mieris, and Gerard Dow so loved to paint, in pictures
1362 13 | she rose hastily, and~went downstairs without dressing. No sooner
1363 8 | his two daughters without~dowries in order to reserve his
1364 10 | daughters prodigiously by dragging~them on the scene very much
1365 22 | as best she could, the draggled tail of an outrageously
1366 25 | glasses which they could not drain.~ ~"Well, my dear," said
1367 11 | author, the constructor of dramas, gave~place to the woman,
1368 1 | portcullises; it is entered by a drawbridge of iron-clamped wood, no~
1369 3 | rector rose and took from a drawer in one of~the tall chests
1370 7 | table, a secretary with many drawers,~inlaid with arabesques
1371 18 | man is a syllogism~which draws conclusions from this external
1372 26 | eminence. Public~humiliation is dreaded as an agony more cruel than
1373 10 | sister and niece; they~are dreadfully worried; but all my seats
1374 18 | himself as he went~to sleep, dreading the sort of inspection to
1375 7 | brilliancy, filled Camille's dreaming~mind for days together.
1376 1 | Croisic, after crossing a~dreary landscape of salt-marshes,
1377 13 | something better than the~dregs of a heart and the weight
1378 8 | never stand beneath the drenching of a gutter and not know~
1379 13 | We haven't beautiful dresses trimmed with lace; we don'
1380 13 | went downstairs without dressing. No sooner did Camille see
1381 25 | arranged that the sound of~her dressing-door closing as women's doors
1382 7 | two cabinets, one for a dressing-room, the other~for a study and
1383 3 | elderly demoiselle was a thin, dried-up old maid, yellow as the~
1384 17 | brotherhood~which would soon have drifted into indifference. What
1385 25 | not to rouse suspicion,~drink heavily, wines, liqueurs!
1386 17 | antediluvian dishes; after drinking the choicest~wines in goblets
1387 12 | she swims, hunts, smokes, drinks, rides on~horseback, writes
1388 16 | finally. One nail, you know, drives out another."~ ~"Not among
1389 1 | Formerly, they must have been Druids, gathering mistletoe in
1390 8 | replied Claude Vignon, dryly.~ ~"Oh," she cried, shrugging
1391 6 | several persons knew of the dual form of Mademoiselle des
1392 2 | Nantes. During his stay in Dublin the old Breton, despite~
1393 21 | bishops, simple priests, duchesses older then herself, and
1394 1 | feudal State,a county or~duchy conquered by the crown or
1395 10 | Between two such professional duellists the combat~cannot last long.
1396 1 | suppressed the seigneurs' dues~levied on inheritance.~ ~
1397 9 | tu mia sarai/, the last~duet of Zingarelli's "Romeo e
1398 10 | under the spell. You have dug your own grave.~Had you
1399 3 | the~ermine of its ancient dukes. In her and in her sister
1400 8 | by some hidden pain, or dulled by gloomy sadness. Excesses
1401 22 | committed more faults than her~duller companions, whose misdemeanors
1402 11 | of the night in~smoking, dulling thus the sufferings of her
1403 18 | Unknown. Sabine was duty, dulness, and the~expected. One became,
1404 24 | after~dinner to go and play dummy whist with the Duc de Grandlieu,
1405 9 | she and Gennaro sang the /Dunque il mio bene tu mia sarai/,
1406 7 | her feelings as Cuvier and Dupuytren explained to friends the~
1407 Add | Fabien-Felicien du (or Duronceret)~Jealousies of a Country
1408 1 | the eye of painters those~dusky tones and half-blurred features
1409 8 | blood had left a~deposit of dust there during the night.
1410 25 | frozen so hard~that they are dusty. Do you want a brush?"~ ~"
1411 3 | being as methodical as a~Dutchman, prudent as a cat, and persistent
1412 9 | majesty; he felt himself dwarfed by the hauteur of certain
1413 14 | but once,a~passion which dyes his soul and his faculties
1414 17 | enough~to satisfy three dynasties never to reproach him for
1415 9 | duet of Zingarelli's "Romeo e Giulietta," one of the most
1416 9 | knowledge of the art~of dress. Ear-rings of silver filagree, miracles
1417 17 | about you. Above all, my earnest prayer to~you is that you
1418 14 | away~on their heads in huge earthen jars after the fashion of
1419 8 | well-deserved praise, and that is easier than~to give you a beard,"
1420 7 | eye, westerly to the sea,~easterly on Guerande. One facade
1421 9 | friendly tone~why he was eating nothing. The question piqued
1422 25 | Schontz had tended towards ebonpoint ever since her life had
1423 4 | remainder of the pack, as in ecarte, but only by order of sequence,
1424 25 | accounts for such varied eccentricities that we are forced to remember~
1425 21 | which we must needs call the~ecclesiastical step, so significant is
1426 3 | house, he replied by an ecclesiastically inquisitive~look.~ ~"Are
1427 2 | lingers like a~divining echo, read books in which the
1428 6 | whose~recent fame has now eclipsed her own. Mademoiselle des
1429 20 | inspired to wear in the hope of~eclipsing a rival, and about which
1430 25 | Remember, my boy, you needn't economize them," he said, with the~
1431 3 | and miserly mistress, thus~economizing those of her own masters.~ ~
1432 15 | his breast. Calyste was in ecstasy. As Conti sang the~first
1433 8 | Scott, of Byron,Parisina, Effie, Minna! yes, and that royal~
1434 12 | you? A child, attracted by effulgence of beauty and by~moral grandeur,
1435 10 | one of those passionate~effusions of feeling that comfort
1436 19 | accoucheur/, a confirmed egotist, all three~lying like a
1437 8 | slight touch of jealousy,~eh?"~ ~"Can you really think
1438 7 | of which the women of the eighteenth century lived~and made love.~ ~
1439 2 | Cathelineau, La Rochejaquelein, d'Elbee, Bonchamps, and~the Prince
1440 18 | young baron sat up, put his elbow on~the table, his chin in
1441 8 | is always carefully, even elegantly dressed. I do respect his~
1442 11 | than ever."~ ~This vehement elegy, in which truth was mingled
1443 14 | felt herself magnified, elevated; in fact, she rose~into
1444 6 | pleasures in~harmony with the elevation of her own mind and the
1445 23 | to herself the rarity of eligible men,~when Couture presented
1446 6 | distinction of all~kinds, and the elite of Parisian women came.
1447 12 | not to be the essence, the elixir of~many other letters begun,
1448 1 | their pleasure beneath the elms.~ ~The houses of the old
1449 18 | Her fair hair draped her~elongated face with a mass of curls,
1450 12 | prayers, our dreams, has ever eluded her. I replied that she~
1451 4 | politicians, had~found a means of eluding this charter. When all the
1452 8 | in the~fancy-balls of the Elysee-Bourbon, was all the while judging
1453 18 | Louis XVI. and the Champs Elysees to a cafe on the boulevard~
1454 2 | more beneficent because it emanated from natural causes.~ ~ ~
1455 9 | been, and now partially emancipated,~was likely to consider
1456 5 | the effect of the~great emancipation that comes with love; they
1457 9 | strengthened by a stone embankment, at the foot~of which is
1458 14 | to talk, and consented to embark; so that by five o'clock
1459 14 | the jetty, where the party embarked~without a smile. The marquise
1460 10 | for~dignity, and trying to embarrass others by paying no attention
1461 9 | acting in a manner that~embarrasses the marquise; she may be
1462 18 | for weapons, seductions, embellishments among their /chiffons;/
1463 13 | coming hostilities of an embittered heart.~ ~Camille instantly
1464 2 | gained of late~a slight embonpoint, but her delicate hips and
1465 1 | old~goblets, an ancient embossed soup-tureen, and two salt-cellars,
1466 11 | composition of her movements, embrace at a glance~the whole figure,
1467 12 | that column~you have once embraced,you are like Samson, you
1468 17 | travelling-carriage,~amid the tears, embraces, and congratulations of
1469 10 | heavy corners of domestic embroidery, and trimmed with~flimsy
1470 24 | food for this connoisseur emeritus, whom all~the women of the
1471 3 | either facts or ideas. He had~emigrated with the rest of his friends,
1472 6 | by Conti, one of the~most eminent musicians of our day; but
1473 6 | false charge of receiving~emissaries of Pitt and Coburg. The
1474 5 | my Calyste?" The baroness~emphasized the /my/. "Les Touches is
1475 6 | it a centre~curve which emphasizes its natural disdain. Camille
1476 5 | without difficulty, among the employes at Saint-Nazaire. Calyste~
1477 8 | she spoke, Felicite was employing all~the resources of her
1478 19 | this plan, led away to the~employment of such means by a Turkish
1479 22 | majority~Josephine Schiltz, the Empress's goddaughter, was on the
1480 6 | administrative~wisdom which enables the provinces to hold their
1481 7 | vase with its long neck enamelled in blue~and gold at some
1482 2 | a garment. Her body was~encased in the /casaquin/ of Brittany,
1483 13 | for you are, you know, enchantingly fair, while I am as black~
1484 17 | You see me under all the enchantments of love and happiness,"
1485 1 | ages.~ ~Guerande is still encircled with its doughty walls,
1486 18 | bust which were cleverly enclosed in a~corset. Her figure
1487 22 | Monsieur de Rochefide first encountered Madame Schontz, she lived
1488 11 | to love you~at the first encouragement; your coldness can alone
1489 7 | imagining certain situations~and encouraging the imagination we end in
1490 7 | trivialities of a woman's existence encumber it; in the midst of which~
1491 8 | there are traces of an encyclopedic comprehension on that~brow,
1492 22 | personages to the~diverse endings of their strange careers,
1493 5 | generation of the du Guenics, by enduring privations, and~saving,
1494 3 | of peace, are treated as enemies.~Observing Monsieur Grimont
1495 1 | golden mantle of her dunes enfolds her, the fragrant breath
1496 6 | Camille has never disavowed, enforce the questions suggested
1497 18 | species~of Rizzio, whom no engagement trammelled, a man absolutely
1498 11 | Monday~you said we had engagements; Tuesday the dinner was
1499 10 | Charlotte.~ ~"He rides like an Englishman," said the marquise, indifferently.~ ~"
1500 11 | tea (that mighty affair to Englishwomen), had something~charming
1501 9 | which English~designers and engravers seek so persistently. Here
1502 7 | with horsehair, and superb engravings by Audran in~mahogany frames.
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