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1503 4 | which Mademoiselle Zephirine engulfed her gains in those~capacious
1504 8 | to~1831, Beatrix, while enjoying the last fetes of the Restoration,~
1505 6 | Ordinarily a woman feels, enjoys, and judges, successively;
1506 7 | was at the gate, which she enlivened by two~brick columns supporting
1507 2 | cloth on~the old oak table, enlivening the still, brown room, as
1508 24 | who thought proper to~ennoble the valet of Louis XI.,
1509 21 | little did he believe in the enormity of the cases about~which
1510 7 | stretch the whole length~of an enormously high pointed roof, with
1511 18 | indeed have~acted wisely. To enrich the man we love and then
1512 1 | ceiling has projecting rafters enriched with foliage which is~varied
1513 11 | genius of things; it is the~ensign which Nature hoists over
1514 21 | Calyste, and a duel should~ensue"~ ~"You have thought wisely,
1515 3 | considerably~had she seen him entangled in what she called innovations.
1516 10 | Calyste to be free of his late entanglement, and almost as good as~married
1517 22 | means the guest or the one~entertained, but applied to a man it
1518 10 | there was a general and enthusiastic cry~for /mouche/. Joy appeared
1519 18 | artifice. It is false, though enticing; a pretence, but~agreeable;
1520 1 | of water, its battlements entire, its loopholes unencumbered
1521 7 | there. A large panelled~entrance-hall has been turned by Felicite
1522 19 | own!~ ~Calyste listened entranced to the witty speeches of
1523 8 | deceive the Deity. You will be entrapped, my dear~child, by his catlike
1524 11 | savage pleasure in thus entrapping her rival in her~toils.
1525 26 | Switzerland, Italy, or~Germany."~ ~Entrenched in that hard /ultimatum/,
1526 10 | soldiers use fascines to build~entrenchments between the enemy and themselves.
1527 6 | swelled by~Breton gossip, envenomed by public ignorance, had
1528 1 | and the naive grace of its environs will please you no~less.
1529 8 | And I am very good at an epigram," said the other, smiling. "
1530 6 | disgust she felt at this episode. Her distress was~perceived
1531 12 | that wily and treacherous epistle of the~malice or the snares
1532 13 | she had justly applied the epithet~of obstinate.~ ~The dinner
1533 13 | say. She thought she~was equalling Camille's devotion, and
1534 22 | horses;/ he protected the equine~race and supported a magazine
1535 25 | Maxime got into his~one-horse equipage, he thought to himself: "
1536 5 | dawn of this~prosperous era. Mademoiselle du Guenic
1537 12 | barrier too high to be o'erleaped by any power, even~by the
1538 2 | holding it aloft in his ermined hand, as on his~scutcheon,
1539 18 | prepares those volcanic eruptions to which, perhaps, we~owe
1540 19 | her~milk went to the head; erysipelas set in, and possibly she
1541 14 | I knew of your little escapade," she said, "and it was
1542 7 | of her~black hair shone, escaping here and there. A short
1543 6 | proportion to the age of their escutcheons. Several peers of France,~
1544 8 | with the Verneuils, the d'Esgrignons,~the Troisvilles, and gave
1545 1 | ground, its walls are all espaliered, and the space within is~
1546 23 | a second Arthur; but no espial on the~part of those about
1547 21 | the sufferings which he~espoused. Two black eyes, ardent
1548 12 | multifarious not to be the essence, the elixir of~many other
1549 5 | taught me."~ ~"You knew the essential things when you learned
1550 1 | The arrondissement road establishes communication by land,~and
1551 3 | doughty old~admiral, Comte d'Estaing. Though his manner was that
1552 22 | informed, you will be able to estimate~the difficulties the duchess
1553 17 | reckoned up the revenues and estimated the~rentals with a veracity
1554 3 | might have gained in her estimation~by a few adventures with
1555 24 | Georges~de Maufrigneuse, de L'Estorade, du Guenic, d'Ajuda, de
1556 18 | presented a nature more~ethereal than slimy, and hid the
1557 15 | them, and so forth. His ethics~were of the highest order;
1558 22 | like of which adorns the European streets of~Amsterdam, Milan,
1559 2 | absolutely necessary to~evacuate it he escaped into the woods
1560 26 | herself, she might have evaded the alternatives~presented
1561 22 | you with a sort of Madame Everard. Besides, have~confidence
1562 22 | ideas and the follies of everbody, and who, astride of~circumstance,
1563 17 | sorrows, by causing me an~everlasting joy. Let the poor Camille,
1564 25 | Calyste now belongs to her ex-friend,"~(Maxime pushed the critic'
1565 26 | beginning thus, ended in an exaltation too~poetic for typography,
1566 10 | humbling herself to be exalted and furious at being~left
1567 16 | but as for his father, the examination was~short; they were surprised
1568 15 | passions~had begun, they examined each other for the last
1569 20 | Dead~Sea.~ ~ ~Two or three examples may serve to show this reaction
1570 10 | practised a manoeuvre most exasperating to~lovers; she held her
1571 18 | the rent of which did not exceed eighteen hundred francs.~
1572 14 | these trifles touched her exceedingly; to hold her gloved hand
1573 2 | military~art and heraldry, but, excepting always his prayer-book,
1574 5 | she leads one of those exceptional existences which cannot
1575 8 | and Constantine are noted exceptions to this~rule.~ ~Certainly
1576 19 | the day, she carried to excess.~Fallen into a mortifying
1577 23 | circumscribed evil; she exchanges it for a dozen~armed and
1578 23 | execute on a basis of~an exchequer limited to eight thousand
1579 23 | public notice~he wanted to excite. At the present moment he
1580 4 | were anxious to continue an exciting game, the daring sailor,
1581 8 | court-yard she uttered an~exclamation of joy, and Zephirine whistled
1582 14 | cries, their prayers, their~exclamations, their pledges of themselves
1583 12 | tale was chiefly told~in exclamatory phrases, with many of those
1584 2 | innovations on~Brittany were the exclusive topics of conversation in
1585 11 | she did not wish to make excursions round the~country. Calyste'
1586 6 | freedom and was thus more excusable for her celebrity, would~
1587 18 | be, as~you are, without excusewe should be two fools"~ ~"
1588 22 | where the fare is usually~execrable, and where the least little /
1589 15 | when~you are really the executioner. Young men spit fire and
1590 6 | what right an old woman exercised so~absolute an empire over
1591 2 | train his son to those manly exercises~which were proper for a
1592 8 | table. Gasselin was out exercising Calyste's~horse, which the
1593 16 | consequent on this spasm of exertion, was forced to return~home,
1594 7 | a space which the saline exhalations prevent~all birds from crossing,
1595 13 | letting a cloud of~smoke exhale from her lips. "Do you love
1596 1 | of each passing season, exhales~at every step; she fills
1597 23 | honor on the occasion of an exhibition of~products, the opening
1598 12 | her soul by the strange~exhibitions and the rapid changes of
1599 17 | withdraws from the family and~exhibits itself publicly on the high-roads
1600 14 | or~desire.~ ~There even exists a thing so rare on the rocky
1601 20 | divans is jute in their eyes, exotic~flowers are nettles, perfumes
1602 9 | moment the great critic~expanded into gaiety that overflowed
1603 14 | and vessels tracked a vast~expanse, and the girdle of green
1604 9 | senses~excited by vague expectation is known to all young men.
1605 23 | Heavens! how stupid I am! he expects me to love him for himself."~ ~
1606 18 | Calyste saw only a marriage of expediency. The joys of the honey-moon~
1607 26 | expression, "I am~at an end of my expedients. Rochefide is incurable.
1608 22 | spend it any more than he expended the~faculties of his mind.
1609 18 | reminiscences; that he~was expending on /me/ the stormy emotions
1610 4 | speculator at the Bourse~expends during the rise and fall
1611 3 | the inevitable~result of experiments. To her, prudence was the
1612 10 | and which often make them expiate the few and~rare pleasures
1613 8 | angel flashes out and then expires. Her eyes are thirsty.~She
1614 18 | my eyes not to hear the explosion~ ~Oh, mother! I am not loved
1615 23 | along a wall with a southern exposure,not that he loved~flowers,
1616 11 | on Beatrix was far more expressive than Felicite expected.~
1617 18 | empire over Calyste still extended. Seeing his~weakness, she
1618 7 | thought of the spectator~extends still further. Such souls
1619 22 | farther line of the Boulevard Exterieur or rises~towards the horrid
1620 8 | you, who are charlatans externally, and yet honest.~Such men
1621 26 | insensibility under which women extinguish their loves. But if they~
1622 5 | If it became desirable~to extract from Mademoiselle du Guenic
1623 8 | born~comedians, braggarts; extravagant in form as a Chinese vase;
1624 21 | child, till you are /in extremis/~before coming to your relief.
1625 6 | contained. The arch of the eye-brows, vigorously drawn, surmounts
1626 26 | Nogent-sur-Marne. They'll recover their eyesight there. During their~stay
1627 10 | wounded eagle seeking its eyrie. Claude himself~knelt down,
1628 Add | Country Town~ ~Ronceret, Fabien-Felicien du (or Duronceret)~Jealousies
1629 26 | DISILLUSIONSIN ALL BUT LA FONTAINE'S FABLES~The next day Calyste seemed
1630 1 | the naive~language of the /fabliaux/, it is impossible to transcribe
1631 18 | human fingers~could have fabricated such gossamer, was wound
1632 18 | false glitter and brilliant fabrics, of silken gauze~and craped
1633 25 | something for me that will facilitate my retreat from the~Olympic
1634 8 | ideas, and a marvellous facility for apprehending and~understanding
1635 1 | saltpetre mines, cotton factories. A few more years and even~
1636 1 | carrier, was, in 1829, the~factotum of this large community.
1637 7 | likes to shed. We have a faculty that is~not in man,that
1638 1 | ancient times~are beginning to fade and disappear. Modern industry,
1639 6 | began to~perceive, not the fading of her beauty, but the beginning
1640 4 | ears, and a thousand other fads and symptoms made him~horribly
1641 26 | on Madame de Rochefide's failure in health, and~expected
1642 4 | cautious feet, which grew fainter in the distance, and~finally
1643 26 | window."~ ~Beatrix fell half fainting on the sofa. Then she negotiated
1644 18 | jardinieres, was lighted~so faintly that Calyste could scarcely
1645 8 | than for the painter whose /faire/~was failing of its purpose.
1646 18 | The presentation of this~fairy effect, to which is added
1647 15 | happiness. We swear eternal~faithfulness, and declare that we desire
1648 25 | dinner, and advised her "faithless one" to go without~her to
1649 15 | prima-~donnas, Mademoiselle Falcon of the Grand Opera. I think
1650 6 | of the~Tour de Nesle was falsely accused of doing; but to
1651 17 | caprice into my love;~it would falsify it. Calyste will do with
1652 2 | erect, whose nerve never faltered for an instance as she~heard
1653 6 | their gait is~not broken by faltering motions. This observation
1654 6 | own life, Felicite soon familiarized herself~with the ways of
1655 1 | In such a situation this familyof absolutely no account in
1656 8 | smiled to him, she~waved her fan; the other hand, issuing
1657 4 | an hour, their cards held fan-shape on their~ ~stomachs, engaged
1658 2 | grow, and the cut of it was fan-shaped. An artist would~have admired
1659 8 | and~sacred to him; he is fanatic; he is sublime in his contempt
1660 8 | dressed as Camille Maupin had fancifully depicted her.~ ~From the
1661 8 | court, taking part in the~fancy-balls of the Elysee-Bourbon, was
1662 8 | beauty in its freedom, the fantasy of the soul, the clouds
1663 7 | perceived by~the soul on far-off heights. These wild and
1664 8 | cries which~touch his soul, farewells of love which they take
1665 22 | betting man. If you had a stud farm~on your property and could
1666 3 | Guenic property from the farmer~/engagistes/. When avarice
1667 17 | through forests, and halts at farmhouses, dinners on~oaken tables,
1668 14 | point of rocks that~runs farthest into the sea. On this granite
1669 4 | importance to it. To put up~one farthing for the chance of winning
1670 4 | stake for each game five farthings, a large amount in the eyes
1671 14 | an evident~intention to fascinate him and prevent another
1672 10 | took me, as soldiers use fascines to build~entrenchments between
1673 3 | for its shape, our present~fashions are just now bringing it
1674 18 | happiness and so clings fast to it,one way~of killing
1675 2 | pleasure~in going to Croisic on fast-days, to purchase a fish to be
1676 13 | between men and women, but~fatally unsafe among women alone.
1677 24 | by the resignation of my father-in-law, and I am promised a~diplomatic
1678 15 | questioned him; but who can fathom a nature so false and~deceiving?
1679 23 | proved innocent. No one had fathomed Madame Schontz,~certainly
1680 8 | weariness, although the fatigues of this young man are not
1681 6 | are in harmony with the faultless~modelling of the head. The
1682 8 | high birth. Without being faultlessly~beautiful, or prettily pretty,
1683 23 | Bixiou fancied he saw the favored one in Leon de Lora; the~
1684 10 | your~ravished, fascinated, fazzling glance? Had I not read into
1685 10 | friendly proposal, but we fearmy sister, my daughter, and~
1686 22 | signifies the giver of the feast~who is niggardly.~ ~Madame
1687 25 | husband /and/ wife; what a feather in my cap!"~ ~"I never thought
1688 25 | two; on the second, four feathers or, placed fretwise,~with /
1689 20 | borne you in~my bosom and fed you with my milk, surprised
1690 9 | Here were the force and~the feebleness of womanhood in full development,
1691 14 | firmest in words is often the feeblest in~action. It is strange
1692 14 | after a pause, she added, feebly, "and me?"~ ~Calyste was
1693 16 | me. What I eat does not feed~me; the air that enters
1694 4 | whose business it is to feign~sentiments, a creature who
1695 11 | both sides with snares, feints, false~generosities, deceitful
1696 14 | vague resemblance to the feline~race, have souls of the
1697 2 | really made by the Duc de Feltre.~But, as an act of gratitude
1698 8 | triumph at the Scala and the~Fenice, and now at the San Carlo.
1699 8 | among the furze and the ferns, whose~very aspect sent
1700 18 | had developed in her the ferocity of the Frank,~the spitefulness
1701 11 | whichas a certain writer ferreting~for the miseries of women,
1702 1 | of the most luxuriant and fertile~vegetations in France. A
1703 16 | replied the chevalier, with a fervency not usual with~him.~ ~"You
1704 1 | apart, essentially Breton, fervently Catholic, silent, self-~
1705 25 | combs."~ ~"He bears: per fesse argent and azure; on the
1706 9 | bear on a shield tierce fessed azure, gules and sable,
1707 11 | Mariotte's cakes; for which festal~event issued from their
1708 17 | France. The whole scene was a festival~I can't describe to you
1709 22 | nail which clinched the fetters of that happy~galley-slave,
1710 8 | Like Etienne Lousteau the feuilletonist,~like Nathan the dramatic
1711 11 | walls of that old mansion.~ ~Feverish irritability, a constant
1712 22 | de Lorette quarter, far fewer houses would be built in
1713 19 | with rights of return, of~fibbing in case Sabine should question
1714 25 | heart~by the roots, every fibre of which clung to it. Maxime
1715 25 | reticences~which stirred the fibres of a curiosity she did not
1716 6 | brown and strewn with red fibrils,~which give them grace and
1717 9 | covered with a transparent fichu, allowed the graceful~outlines
1718 23 | These diverse manias create fictitious~dignities, presidents, vice-presidents,
1719 17 | foolish woman disdained for a fiddler,for that woman evidently~
1720 1 | Before 1789 the tenure of the fiefs subject to~the castle of
1721 2 | burning sun, watching for a field-~mouse or the terrible grub
1722 8 | equals a sea, like that of Fiesole?~ ~But alas! we are only
1723 17 | at~this moment to make a fifth at /mouche/ (that is the
1724 16 | contest to those of the strong fighters of our present~civilization.
1725 13 | alone, without witnesses, in fighting this~duel of deception on
1726 25 | and you are man~who likes figure-heads. Besides, you want to send
1727 16 | affected Calyste deeply. His filial sorrow~silenced for a moment
1728 25 | poetic gift, La Palferine's /finesse/, Couture's~financial eye,
1729 12 | to the~piano and ran his finger-nail over the notes, making them
1730 9 | soul. Warmed by the first fires of imagination,~souls like
1731 7 | the main road of /terra firma/, stands a country-house,
1732 14 | side. But the woman who is firmest in words is often the feeblest
1733 3 | displaying on all points the firmness of character which is noticeable~
1734 1 | utensils~of a huntsman and a fisherman hang from nails upon the
1735 10 | being~left upon her knees; fishing, as the English say, for
1736 16 | footholds on the~sides of the fissure, he had found a means of
1737 26 | has tongue, but you have fist and loins. What weights~
1738 6 | expresses resolution and fitly ends this profile, royal~
1739 8 | daughter of your uncle, Lord Fitzwilliam, it is~almost certain that
1740 2 | hollow face, to which the fixedness of the white and~sightless
1741 18 | nature, so persistent yet so flabby,~something between a mollusk
1742 8 | baroness saw these thoughts flaming in the eyes of her son,~
1743 7 | heir of Italy,~Spain, and Flanders, in which talent has become
1744 3 | in poor health, who wore flannel for his~rheumatism, a black-silk
1745 2 | jacket~with little pockets flapping about his hips, waistcoat
1746 8 | through which the lightnings flashbut I, alas! I know nothing~
1747 8 | Southern~passions; an angel flashes out and then expires. Her
1748 23 | exclusively. Now of all flattering passions there is none more
1749 8 | smiles~at Meyerbeer and flatters him, when he fain would
1750 3 | granaries with~wheat, rye, and flax, and waiting for a rise
1751 10 | life, would have made~me flee from existence; to-day it
1752 17 | accept a few paltry and fleeting benefits from me? Surely
1753 8 | a turn in the garden. No Flemish or~Dutch picture ever presented
1754 8 | between the hair and the flesh-tones, and to set in full~relief
1755 22 | Rochefide beat by a length Fleur-de-Genet the property of~Monsieur
1756 16 | flame of his~own life were flickering. The baroness no longer
1757 17 | scintillating with a~million of flies, all buzzing in the Breton
1758 10 | embroidery, and trimmed with~flimsy lace. Her gait was tolerably
1759 11 | glance, and~struck fire like flints. The marquise lowered her
1760 14 | Beatrix and Calyste saw her flitting~before them over the peaks
1761 16 | banner used formerly to float from that twisted~column?"
1762 1 | her flower-strewn robe floats onward,~the golden mantle
1763 6 | to view the house. They flocked from the village of Batz,~
1764 8 | of hers, which resembles floods of light, and she becomes
1765 14 | like~a marble bath-tub and floored with fine white sand, in
1766 2 | morning, he polished the floors and cleaned~the rooms on
1767 23 | vice-president of some sort of floral society presided~over by
1768 25 | othersAntonia,~Malaga, Cadine, or Florentinewould have made him lose."~ ~"
1769 26 | heart and without head, floundering in evil. Madame de~Rochefide
1770 2 | arms, at the ends of which flourished her hands,~their brownish-red
1771 8 | letter sadly.~ ~That sadness flowed to the heart of the mother
1772 1 | clasped with her girdle; her flower-strewn robe floats onward,~the
1773 18 | the landings filled with flowering plants. On the first floor
1774 14 | blue-bells, her crimped hair fluffy beneath it, a gown of some
1775 8 | which seems a mysterious~fluid shedding love, he casts
1776 1 | proudly~posed to command the flux and reflux of the tides
1777 16 | a time I have thought of flying there"~ ~"Ah!" cried the
1778 16 | and dashing their white foam. Calyste was~thin and pale;
1779 3 | to protect his head from fog, and a~spencer to guard
1780 6 | certain eyes, by a species of~foil, which sends back the light
1781 9 | flowers. He stood with arms folded, lost in~meditation. Here
1782 25 | always be proud to be a follower of yours."~ ~"Ah! my dear
1783 8 | live without my~beautiful fond loves? Must I never tremble
1784 5 | awaited Calyste. The baroness fondly hoped to induce her~son
1785 19 | breakfast with the pretty~fooleries and senseless words which
1786 10 | very well~that love is only foolishness; there is nothing solid
1787 18 | rippled the rays of~the foot-lights attracted by the shining
1788 1 | form arcades under which foot-passengers circulate, the floor planks~
1789 14 | her heart sought for some foothold on which she might remain
1790 16 | box; for, by studying the footholds on the~sides of the fissure,
1791 23 | him~one of those elegant footmen without wages whom the mistresses
1792 18 | in~my love! Why did she forbid me to go to Les Touches?
1793 12 | which I~have placed myself forbids my accepting homage. That
1794 26 | with the firm intention of forcing the blockade, driving away
1795 19 | nor angel; which sees, forebodes,~shows us the unseen, and
1796 5 | surprised, therefore, at the foreboding~thoughts which accompanied
1797 17 | uncertain duration is the forecast of conjugal life? The first
1798 11 | impossible for some~women to forego it; but when that man belongs
1799 14 | Instead of being flung head foremost~down the precipice, Beatrix
1800 2 | last year or so, sleep, the forerunner of death, seemed to be~preparing
1801 22 | one of his ministers, who foresaw~the future.~ ~Napoleon had
1802 13 | s mind. Camille's speech foreshadowed something fatal, and he~
1803 4 | as long~as there are no forfeits in the basket each player
1804 5 | charm men as to make them forgetful of mother, family,~country,
1805 1 | native character allows no~forgetfulness of things which concern
1806 13 | interrupt her friend.~ ~"He forgets the love which carried us
1807 21 | from him, as the price of forgiveness, my public~desertion, a
1808 25 | passed beneath~the Caudine forks of submission. A real love
1809 7 | to~bring out their weird formationsthat sight uplifts the mind although~
1810 25 | and Aurelie parted on this formidable dialogue, he to play~cards
1811 22 | Duchesse de Grandlieu~was forming plans about him, the stage
1812 22 | them, and~applied them as formulas of criticism. His military
1813 21 | but she never for a moment forsook the role she had imposed
1814 22 | rule.[*] Marquis in the~forties, sexagenary retired shopkeeper,
1815 23 | Bixiou, who had passed his fortieth year and ought~to be making
1816 1 | sensation at sight of that vast fortification, which is still as good~
1817 1 | beautiful esplanade of the fortifications facing the dunes~had been
1818 26 | gestures, and a~certain fortress-like demeanor, if we may so call
1819 23 | wife. Couture, a man about forty-~three years of age, half
1820 16 | she died at the age of forty-nine, during the~emigration,
1821 10 | no consequence in a woman forty-seven years of age.~ ~"Monsieur
1822 26 | to whom his mother had~forwarded thirty thousand francs,
1823 4 | and beloved. Perhaps his fossil life at~Guerande hid many
1824 9 | whom the~Gars was killed at Fougeres in 1800 was the daughter
1825 5 | with silver buttons, a blue foulard necktie,~trousers of gray
1826 18 | happiness~rested on such a frail foundation that it would perish at
1827 19 | Abd-el-Kader is nearly~foundered. You told me you would be
1828 14 | faculties by mingling with the~fountain of his life at a period
1829 26 | spontaneous brilliancy, as the fountains have~water; men of the world
1830 22 | in being the sultan of a four-footed harem, governed by an~old
1831 14 | child,~such as I was at fourteen or sixteenwhen I was worthy
1832 1 | hung with tapestries of the fourteenth century; the~style and the
1833 15 | Vignon, remarked in the foyer: 'It is hard to lose~fame
1834 18 | happiness~rested on such a frail foundation that it would
1835 3 | monastic amplitude. His bodily frame, like that of the baron,
1836 Add | Daughter of Eve~ ~Gerard, Francois-Pascal-Simon, Baron~A Bachelor's Establishment~ ~
1837 13 | the silliest of~them, the frankest as the shrewdest, are seldom
1838 12 | existence, and Iyou see, I am frankI should have~taken it; I
1839 9 | almost red, and a white skin,~freckled here and there, whose head
1840 22 | those solitudes of~carved free-stone, the like of which adorns
1841 12 | see you; you will soon be~freed from me. Therefore I may
1842 17 | Touches made me~talk to her freely, she also gave me much to
1843 19 | due North, icy enough~to freeze the Seine had she looked
1844 14 | pushing her from~him with frenzied violence.~ ~He listened
1845 5 | as usual, an emotion that frequency~never weakened,an emotion
1846 1 | the more rapid and more frequented way being by~water from
1847 23 | cynical~philosopher, all frequenters of this amusing salon, were
1848 4 | a writer for the stage; frequenting theatres and actors;~squandering
1849 3 | from the sudden gusts which~freshen the atmosphere of Guerande.
1850 25 | four feathers or, placed fretwise,~with /Servir/ for motto,
1851 6 | social conventions.~Her friendships seemed purely platonic.
1852 23 | gloves, embroidered shirt and frill, waistcoat more or less~
1853 14 | she wore trousers with frilled edges, a short blouse, a
1854 7 | trousers with~embroidered frills, and the prettiest of Turkish
1855 7 | ocean~tossing its foaming fringe upon the granite rocks as
1856 7 | pleats and trimmed~with fringes and cords and tassels worthy
1857 17 | which strike the eye of a frivolous~Parisian girl, something
1858 1 | have suffered upon their~frontage from the hammer of the architect,
1859 1 | are small and low; their fronts are veneered with slate.
1860 24 | represented love! Never did their frosty-hearted~fathers know what absolute
1861 18 | could not endure~to see a frown, went, urged by her, to
1862 18 | him with a cold eye that froze the very marrow~of his bones. "
1863 1 | bordered with cordons of fruit-~trees, which the man-of-all-work,
1864 14 | inmost desire is to win its fruition through moral conviction.~
1865 24 | creature, she smells of the frying of hell-fire;' but we rush
1866 17 | made up of pleasures,as fugitive in that~relation as in all
1867 6 | Touches for his model. That~full-blooded, powerful temperament is
1868 16 | woman~dropped her knitting, fumbled in her pocket for a while,
1869 3 | services, paid from the~fund of the Invalides de la Marine.
1870 14 | one of those mute inward~furies known only to those who
1871 26 | monsieur?" said Calyste, furiously.~ ~"Monsieur le Comte de
1872 25 | Aurelie's million will furnish the security, and you'll
1873 18 | the work of restoring~and furnishing the hotel du Guenic had
1874 6 | The upper lip is thin, the~furrow which unites it with the
1875 18 | the garden, with its walls furrowed by those black and~yellow
1876 20 | herself. These thoughts~plowed furrows in her heart. She wanted
1877 14 | gray; and to melt them, to fuse those blocks of stone it
1878 6 | other. Far from the noisy fuss of Madame de~Stael, far
1879 3 | accompanied him. This man, fussy as~a fine lady, worried
1880 6 | rigid circle defined by the futile education~given to women,
1881 22 | papa, and you'll be the gainer."~ ~In fact, Aurelie contrived
1882 10 | mother's attentions were gaining on~him, came to his aid.~ ~"
1883 1 | ignorant culture. The du Gaisnics remain the owners of these
1884 5 | and a becoming pair of gaiters. His white brow~bore the
1885 11 | chairs.~Mariotte had made galettes of buckwheat, the baroness
1886 23 | the future of liberated galley-~slaves, in all the little
1887 15 | must needs return~to my galleys! And it is you, Camille,
1888 4 | saddle his horse himself and gallop to Nantes for it. I~am not
1889 22 | degrade an institution to a~gambling game; you make a Bourse
1890 4 | the sea or watching~the gambols of his little dog, perhaps
1891 1 | or war, three sabres, two game-bags, the utensils~of a huntsman
1892 8 | ballet, and what the famous Garat was; at any rate he recalls
1893 14 | left Les~Touches by the garden-gate which opens on the dunes.
1894 6 | family of the porter and~gardener, not less, in two years,
1895 18 | style. This room, hung with garnet~velvet heightened here and
1896 1 | freestone from cellar to garret. The~facade on the court-yard
1897 8 | tremble or throb or fear or gasp,~or lie beneath implacable
1898 10 | head to ride~through the gateway.~ ~"God keep him!" replied
1899 1 | du Guaisqlain. The tax-~gatherer now writes the name, as
1900 6 | lost in that soul, which~gathers itself up and retires with
1901 2 | name was~ever varied. Saint Gaudebert and Saint Calyste were forever
1902 2 | an ancient family usage, Gaudebert-Calyste-Louis. The~father's name was Gaudebert-Calyste-Charles.
1903 1 | are neither Frenchmen~nor Gauls,they are Bretons; or, to
1904 18 | Rochefide, now~become bony and gaunt, her complexion faded and
1905 14 | might precipitate~the rash gazer into the sea, or, still
1906 6 | womankind.~ ~Just as Clara Gazul is the female pseudonym
1907 1 | superstitions. If, by chance, a gendarme passes you, with his~silver-laced
1908 6 | covetousness, and ambition make the generality of men~perform,even those
1909 3 | hands a plump visage, and a generally white skin~though yellow
1910 22 | subscriber to all the absurdities~generated by patriotism or party spirit
1911 11 | with snares, feints, false~generosities, deceitful confessions,
1912 14 | She~breathed a sweet and genial atmosphere of feelings hitherto
1913 8 | Mademoiselle des Touches.~ ~Genoa, July 2.~ ~I have not written
1914 9 | silver filagree, miracles of Genoese jewelry,~destined no doubt
1915 1 | have little access.~ ~Its geographical position explains this phenomenon.
1916 7 | from the island of~Croisic. Geographically, Croisic is really a peninsula;
1917 5 | education had been~limited to geography and the circumspect history
1918 1 | enormous nails placed in geometric~figures. The arch is semicircular.
1919 8 | last and constant insult Geranno~offers me is to suppose
1920 6 | followed the Bourbons to~Ghent, leaving their house to
1921 14 | peaks and chasms like a ghost or vision; she was~trying
1922 7 | them on the scale~of the giant who cradled the infancy
1923 14 | the summit of this little Gibraltar, the shape of which is~nearly
1924 17 | fitness of things, these gifts of race made Sabine de Grandlieu
1925 1 | at the sunshine, where it gilds the sands and shimmers on
1926 3 | Guenic hall that~singular gingerbread-colored candle called an /oribus/
1927 18 | so poetically painted by Girodet. Her fair hair draped her~
1928 9 | of Zingarelli's "Romeo e Giulietta," one of the most pathetic~
1929 22 | to a man it signifies the giver of the feast~who is niggardly.~ ~
1930 26 | persons are surprised at the glacial~ ~insensibility under which
1931 1 | spelled in the olden time du Glaicquin), from which comes du~Guesclin,
1932 6 | political commotions, the glamour of that theatrical~play
1933 9 | our lives," said Camille, glancing~at him imperiously.~ ~The
1934 12 | flamed up in it like the glare of a~conflagration.~ ~Calyste
1935 18 | old celadon, between which gleamed a silver cup attributed
1936 8 | everywhere,in those sands gleaming in the sun,~in the green
1937 6 | animated ivory.~The light glides along a skin of that texture
1938 9 | to him; he~walked on air, gliding along by the walls of Les
1939 18 | course of reading, in which glittered the handle of a dagger used~
1940 13 | before them, and the sun was glittering on the sands~of the shore.
1941 13 | alternations of~joy and gloom, happiness and unhappiness,
1942 12 | in one person two great glories.~ ~You, Calyste, are one
1943 6 | in like manner, when~the glow of the soul is absent the
1944 2 | garden side.~ ~Near this gnarled trunk of an ancient tree,
1945 8 | succeeding July, 1830, like gnats in~the sunshine, and turned
1946 4 | ailments, his headaches, the gnawings in his stomach, the~buzzing
1947 10 | his untried~soul to bear. Goaded by an immense regret which
1948 26 | Aurelie have both touched goal together. Aurelie has just
1949 7 | little salon is hung with Gobelin tapestry,~framed in marvellously
1950 8 | golden Spanish wine into a goblet, and the old housekeeper
1951 Add | Birotteau~Father Goriot~Gobseck~Ursule Mirouet~A Man of
1952 22 | Josephine Schiltz, the Empress's goddaughter, was on the verge of the~
1953 3 | always went armed with a gold-~headed cane to drive away
1954 1 | Guerande: Gules, a hand proper~gonfaloned ermine, with a sword argent
1955 25 | you?" asked the marquis, good-humoredly, seeing the~hat carried
1956 22 | young men and the complacent good-nature with which Monsieur de~Rochefide
1957 6 | the orphan to~Faucombe, a good-sized estate near Nantes, belonging
1958 12 | She has mind and she has goodness,two~qualities almost irreconcilable
1959 10 | to be taken for a little goose. She~was the petted child
1960 7 | bochettino/, perfumed the goose-quill, which~she attached to the
1961 18 | trust to chance to cut the Gordian knot of their~indecision.
1962 26 | made me swear on the holy Gospels to hold my~tongue."~ ~"Will
1963 18 | could have fabricated such gossamer, was wound about her throat
1964 3 | t prevent the town~from gossiping."~ ~"What do they say?"
1965 8 | critic was~something of a gourmand, and Felicite pampered the
1966 22 | where the least little /gourmet/ dinner costs sixty~francs
1967 3 | Her nieces also made her gowns, cut by an~immutable pattern.
1968 22 | he granted a tiger very graciously. Madame~Schontz was not
1969 2 | colors which, by insensible gradations, sank into the~melancholy
1970 2 | lustrous skin took a finer grain; the~outlines of her form
1971 3 | monopolist, and clinging to those grain-sacks obstinately. By~singular
1972 25 | to the club of the~rue de Gramont; he became supremely elegant,
1973 3 | consisted in filling your granaries with~wheat, rye, and flax,
1974 6 | and invested them on the Grand-livre at the very~moment of the
1975 12 | escaped him. Thisbe~was the granddaughter of a delightful Thisbe,
1976 14 | accorded to the road to the Grande Chartreuse over all other
1977 8 | daughter to~a Portuguese grandee, was anxious to find an
1978 1 | thought of our immediate grandfathers, abandoned by a generation
1979 8 | abnormal beings of us. Her old grandmother, the dowager de~Casteran,
1980 6 | exist in Paris without /grands seigneurs/ and~a voluptuous
1981 16 | world~without seeing my grandson, a little pink and white
1982 7 | Nature changed her laws in granting me a dozen years of youth
1983 25 | crossed by three bunches grapes purpure, leaved~vert, one
1984 15 | committing follies," he said, grasping Camille's hand, and~bidding
1985 6 | of infinitude which she grasps~and contemplates in her
1986 17 | grace peacefully on the grass~in the halls (which castle
1987 1 | steps are now disjointed, grasses have forced their way with
1988 Add | Establishment~A Start in Life~Pierre Grassou~Honorine~Cousin Betty~ ~
1989 9 | interest in him than~for the gratification of Conti; she saw a white
1990 22 | Schontz had received the gratuitous education of Saint-Denis,~
1991 3 | Pen-Hoel," said Mariotte.~ ~The gravel in the court-yard crackled
1992 16 | timidly.~ ~"Come, come, old gray-beard, you've forgotten to put
1993 7 | the sands beyond it.~ ~The grayish tones of the house harmonize
1994 3 | and~a pack of cards as greasy as those of the custom-house
1995 11 | viscountess is the admiral's great-niece," replied Camille.~ ~"Well,
1996 6 | de~Faucombe, her maternal great-uncle, who lived in Nantes.~ ~
1997 23 | by the~exercise of that greedy common-sense peculiar to
1998 11 | in white against the~dark greens of the foliage. Calyste,
1999 3 | the rather absent-minded greeting of the~mistress of the house,
2000 3 | after the usual exchange of~greetings.~ ~"Yes, mademoiselle; I
2001 1 | family is indifferent, would~grieve a poet. On the mantel-shelf,
2002 5 | Oh!" cried Calyste, in a grieved voice, "my darling mother,
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