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2003 2 | the mouth with a sort of grin, which gave him an expression
2004 1 | crossbars of stone, still grinds, as it turns, the~vane of
2005 13 | certain speeches of Camille; a grinning devil~seemed to show her,
2006 22 | HISTORY OF AN UPPER-CLASS GRISETTE~A storm was gathering, as
2007 7 | of a hidden plaint, the groan~of repressed affliction.
2008 2 | felt lost. After he had~groomed his horses in the morning,
2009 1 | care of in the~intervals of grooming the horses. At the farther
2010 5 | des Touches were not even grooms in the days~when du Guesclin
2011 12 | more clearly, and also the grounds of Calyste's hope. At this
2012 26 | a murmur arose in every group. In a moment~the crowd dispersed;
2013 26 | the stairs or standing in groups below it, awaiting~the announcement
2014 7 | refreshing~scenes, the groves, the flowery meadows around
2015 8 | he~also sees obstacles, grows alarmed or disgusted, lets
2016 14 | vegetable earth for~the growth of a box-plant, compact,
2017 2 | field-~mouse or the terrible grub of the cockchafer; then,
2018 1 | which disfigures that of du Guaisqlain. The tax-~gatherer now writes
2019 1 | were to the Romans. The Guaisqlains (the name~is also spelled
2020 21 | proposed to your father, I can guarantee to you the~recovery of Calyste.
2021 6 | during~her minority by her guardians.~ ~Felicite acquired from
2022 6 | archaeologist handed over to her his~guardianship accounts. From that year,
2023 6 | his rank as major of the guards of the gate had placed him.
2024 22 | leader of those bold Alsacian guerillas who came near saving the~
2025 8 | like the sister of Dido in Guerin's~picture, and said,~ ~"
2026 1 | in the times~of the du Guesclins, were as superior to the
2027 18 | knows life so little that he guesses nothing, or he /does/ know~
2028 12 | apparition in the little salon, guided thither by the voices of~
2029 5 | twice, as~it were, after guiding his footsteps as a little
2030 7 | stay!"~ ~of Matilde in "Guillaume Tell," taking all gravity
2031 19 | had not been conscious of guilt, "I see~that it is quite
2032 25 | art of making.~She wore a guipure pelerine of spidery texture,
2033 19 | the heart and intellect gush forth like the waters~of
2034 6 | with as much rapidity as it gushed for a~second into those
2035 12 | when I think of you; blood gushes from my heart, and its hot
2036 12 | a letter is written with gushings from the heart,~too overflowing,
2037 14 | and from which a sudden gust of wind might precipitate~
2038 Note| and the well-~known critic Gustave Planche.~ ~The opening scene
2039 3 | precious chest from the sudden gusts which~freshen the atmosphere
2040 8 | beneath the drenching of a gutter and not know~it rains, like
2041 7 | answered Camille, in a guttural voice, letting the tears
2042 21 | Remember too how Madame Guyon~complained of the lack of
2043 7 | that sombre and melancholy habitation, looking out upon the sombre
2044 8 | on that~brow, and in the habitual movement of a face that
2045 25 | and some old fellows who habitually sunned themselves like~wall-fruit
2046 8 | or suicide. Yes, I could hack in pieces whoever insulted
2047 25 | never have had them if he hadn't known you. In~less than
2048 19 | reality took place. The hairs of her head were~like so
2049 2 | have had, large, broad,~hairy; hands that once had clasped
2050 1 | casemates once occupied by halberdiers and archers, which~are not
2051 20 | by a screen to obtain the half-~lights favorable to faded
2052 9 | and he cast that sly but half-abstracted look upon~Camille which
2053 1 | painters those~dusky tones and half-blurred features in which the artistic
2054 12 | Calyste strikes me as half-crazy," replied Mademoiselle de
2055 16 | father was dying beside his~half-dying son. The probable extinction
2056 9 | the marquise. In the soft half-light he saw, reclining on a~divan,
2057 26 | to~penury.~ ~But Calyste, half-mad with despair, had secretly
2058 18 | door of the proscenium box half-open, and his feet took him there~
2059 13 | approval.~ ~The two women were half-sitting, half lying, in apparent
2060 21 | play off the melancholy half-smile of the fallen angel, who~
2061 13 | with~glances, gestures, half-spoken sentences,not enough to
2062 12 | of a pile of blotted and half-torn paper. He was writing to~
2063 16 | of the old Chevalier du Halgaa spectre leading a shade~
2064 17 | peacefully on the grass~in the halls (which castle we have sworn
2065 9 | they not then like those haloed saints, full of faith,~hope,
2066 17 | rides through forests, and halts at farmhouses, dinners on~
2067 1 | their~frontage from the hammer of the architect, the brush
2068 7 | narghile,~a riding-whip, a hammock, a rifle, a man's blouse,
2069 8 | My part in life is not to hamper you."~ ~Mariotte came to
2070 6 | age, the old archaeologist handed over to her his~guardianship
2071 8 | aided by the perfecting of handicrafts, now gives to its service.
2072 18 | in which glittered the handle of a dagger used~as a paper-cuttersymbol
2073 23 | provincial, supplied with the two~handles by which women take hold
2074 20 | sentence and~recognizing her handwriting he flung the letter into
2075 16 | lethargic indifference of the hapless youth for submission to~
2076 18 | sadness, seeking to know if haply the cause is~in herself;
2077 17 | moments, we~are forty times happier than young women, and then,
2078 14 | made me the proudest and happiest of my sex, and you will
2079 7 | my fortune and make you happyat least, so far as money can~
2080 14 | three miles distant from the harbor, on the point of rocks that~
2081 15 | were, fixed habits, and~are hardened. The reaction of the mental
2082 22 | spent as much as that in the hardest days of her life.~ ~ ~
2083 14 | her on the ground of her hardness. A woman is always~over-excited
2084 8 | with faces and forms so harmoniously blending. The handsome young
2085 7 | grayish tones of the house harmonize admirably with the scene
2086 14 | No longer was there any~harshness in her words or any coldness
2087 8 | my~memory has stored rich harvests. Have you made plans, as
2088 | hast
2089 10 | releasing himself with cruel haste~as he remembered the projects
2090 11 | Camille rose.~ ~"I will go and hasten breakfast; my walk has given
2091 6 | crisis.~ ~As a Royalist, she hastened to be present at the return
2092 8 | that I~know him, and he hates me accordingly. If he could
2093 8 | think so?" said Camille, haughtily.~ ~"You are more perspicacious
2094 25 | count, with a mixture~of haughtiness and jest.~ ~"Well, then,
2095 9 | felt himself dwarfed by the hauteur of certain of her~glances,
2096 11 | agreement~between us, if you havenot a long conversationbut a
2097 25 | fellow dressed like the head-~waiter of a restaurant?"
2098 7 | painted white, with the arched head-board surmounted by~Cupids scattering
2099 12 | come to the opera in that head-dress, and~I said to her: 'Madame,
2100 12 | so famous~that women wore head-dresses '/a la/ Belle-Poule.' Madame
2101 24 | was merely a sentimental head-love in which~neither the heart
2102 4 | Kergarouets, were voted head-splitters, algebraic problems, and~
2103 4 | his fancied ailments, his headaches, the gnawings in his stomach,
2104 3 | went armed with a gold-~headed cane to drive away the dogs
2105 12 | terms. Calyste, with the headlong impulse of~love, flung himself
2106 15 | life before me in which to heal~myself. For me, life has
2107 13 | the misfortune of being healthy~and robust, and of loving
2108 8 | hasn't~any. Bearing his hearers to heaven on a song which
2109 7 | suddenly sang the words in a heart-rending manner, and then as~suddenly
2110 17 | inaugurates the domestic hearth and bed in private, as to
2111 10 | moment, must be laughing heartily at the~provincial mother
2112 25 | to rouse suspicion,~drink heavily, wines, liqueurs! I'll tell
2113 8 | abstruse things,~Chinese, Hebrew, hieroglyphics perhaps,
2114 2 | probably have ended in that~hecatomb.~ ~When, on a stormy night
2115 25 | persists in keeping on the hind heels of her~pride, don't you
2116 17 | for my happiness is at its heightand how can~that be told? I
2117 18 | hung with garnet~velvet heightened here and there with dead-gold
2118 24 | smells of the frying of hell-fire;' but we rush to her,~we
2119 25 | for motto, and a squire's helmet. It is not much; it~seems
2120 25 | boulevard between Maxime~and his henchman, the seductive Charles-Edouard,
2121 1 | would delight a lover of the heraldic~art by a simplicity which
2122 2 | knew the military~art and heraldry, but, excepting always his
2123 1 | desert without~a tree, an herb, a bird; where, on sunny
2124 1 | little town is therefore the Herculaneum of~feudality, less its winding
2125 5 | his physical~strength was Herculean. His muscles had the suppleness
2126 11 | handsomest horse in the herd~for his successor. Beauty,
2127 14 | since admitted that it was hereat this moment, and on this~
2128 18 | proposed to me to visit~that hermitage, now his property. But as
2129 16 | idea gives to the eyes of hermits and solitary souls, or the~
2130 2 | After the~death of all those heroes of the West, the baron,
2131 18 | myself, like the~innocent heroines of all melodramas, by gathering
2132 4 | solemnly planted on his two~heron-legs in the sunshine on the mall,
2133 14 | tortuous rocky path before herover~which her love for Calyste
2134 8 | dignity, I did~right not to hesitate. If at times I have a few
2135 24 | Nathan, between whom she was hesitating when Calyste threw himself~
2136 9 | the long~and respectful hesitations, the tender debatings, the
2137 1 | mullioned in stone with hexagonal leaded panes, and are draped
2138 11 | about those of the woman, hey? The man did not observe
2139 22 | in~poverty under its most hideous aspect, or by premature
2140 17 | sense of modesty,that which hides from the public eye and~
2141 8 | things,~Chinese, Hebrew, hieroglyphics perhaps, or the papyrus
2142 2 | the royal origin of the high-born woman. The pure lips,~finely
2143 17 | and were fairly on the high-road to Brittany.~ ~Is it not
2144 17 | exhibits itself publicly on the high-roads and in face of strangers.~
2145 25 | and presuming young~man so highly to Beatrix that she, spurred
2146 13 | replied Camille. "I do love himfar too much~for my own peace
2147 25 | will undertake to decide himif he is drunk. Go and see
2148 25 | persists in keeping on the hind heels of her~pride, don'
2149 21 | you whether I shall make~hindrances to my own salvation in the
2150 1 | du Guaisnics,~covered by hinged pewter lids. The chimney-piece
2151 16 | whom the baron had given a hint, was~sparkling. After the
2152 25 | know she~possessed. Nathan hinted that La Palferine's wit
2153 4 | baroness~would give her sundry hints by pressing her foot a certain
2154 22 | supported a magazine devoted to hippic questions; but, for~all
2155 11 | himself on the morrow in hiring a boat and sailors to take
2156 6 | Sand says of herself, in "L'Histoire de Ma Vie," published~long
2157 22 | paint it with fidelity, the~historian should proportion the number
2158 1 | splendor never mentioned by historians, who are always more concerned~
2159 19 | Guenic become once more historical!" Then suddenly plunging~
2160 12 | marriage.~Calyste wandered hither and thither like a butterfly
2161 22 | answered.~ ~This secret hoard was increased by jewels
2162 4 | game, was to~this confirmed hoarder a mighty financial operation,
2163 8 | weakening; without being either~hoarse or extinct, it touches the
2164 8 | touches the confines of hoarseness and~extinction. The impassibility
2165 11 | the~ensign which Nature hoists over her most precious creations;
2166 14 | that divided the different holdings, whence they watched the
2167 1 | magnificence through the loop-~holes of the casemates once occupied
2168 17 | worthy people, in their holiday costumes,~expressing their
2169 14 | conviction of a future of holiness. The thought~filled her
2170 22 | marquis was brought to see the~hollowness of the turf; he realized
2171 18 | Antoine, I am not at homefor every one," she said. "Put
2172 17 | centenary linen, bending under Homeric~viands served on antediluvian
2173 1 | hedges~are full of flowers, honeysuckles, roses, box, and many enchanting~
2174 3 | Guenics, always showed herself honored~by her relations with Madame
2175 8 | and trampled him under hoof.~ ~I write, therefore, to
2176 3 | the cane with the short~hook that all women carried in
2177 2 | poplar-wood.~These hands, hooked or contracted from the habit
2178 14 | magnificently clear.~Near the horizon the sea had taken, as it
2179 6 | white; it has the texture of horn, but the~tone is warm. The
2180 22 | Exterieur or rises~towards the horrid town of Batignolles, she
2181 22 | should set~their hearts on horse-flesh, but only for the good of
2182 7 | mahogany,~chairs covered with horsehair, and superb engravings by
2183 6 | consequence, an admirable~horsewoman, and recovered her health
2184 23 | which he presented to~the horticultural world as the product of
2185 23 | meant to attack through horticulture the public notice~he wanted
2186 11 | this~sentiment of joyful hospitality.~ ~A few moments after Calyste'
2187 13 | keen~as Maupin the coming hostilities of an embittered heart.~ ~
2188 18 | make us~eager to go there hot-foot, our eyes shining with the
2189 2 | heard the baying of the hounds and the trampling~of the
2190 4 | Mohammedan paradise where the houris are not women. There is
2191 22 | She laid out for herself a house-keeping role for which she~claimed
2192 6 | explain the rumors which hovered about the~person whom Calyste
2193 23 | his brother~speculators howl; but Couture had been one
2194 4 | of a normal evening the hubbub excited in~Guerande homes
2195 2 | the impassibility of the Huguenots; something,~one might say,
2196 1 | before~the ancestors of Hugues Capet were ever heard of,
2197 14 | She felt herself inwardly humbled; a~true, pure love bathed
2198 10 | country wisdom~and patronage, humbling herself to be exalted and
2199 14 | yielded to him, and kissed it humbly.~ ~"You have the right to
2200 8 | the invisible signs of his humbug. His tone of conviction
2201 8 | sort of~innocence; their humbuggery is in their blood; they
2202 11 | Camille, whom she found with humid eyes~lying back on her sofa.~ ~"
2203 25 | she will meet with ten humiliations for every one she has inflicted~
2204 25 | as respectful as it was~humorous.~ ~"If I had sufficient
2205 3 | little crooked, possibly hump-backed; but no~one had ever been
2206 2 | nose; but in that~nose, humped in the middle, lay the signs
2207 18 | tirade, improvised for the hundredth time, she~played the pupils
2208 11 | odors will not appease their~hunger; they think too much of
2209 25 | live like the birds, to hunt the fields~of Paris like
2210 16 | for some days all three~hunted. Calyste obeyed his father
2211 11 | is keenly~distrustful; no hunter could meet with game more
2212 4 | corresponding to that of the~hunters after big game. Mademoiselle
2213 2 | night, and gave the two fine~hunting-dogs their daily meal. The joyful
2214 12 | Camille is a man; she swims, hunts, smokes, drinks, rides on~
2215 1 | game-bags, the utensils~of a huntsman and a fisherman hang from
2216 12 | into which his passion was hurling~Calyste.~ ~ ~Calyste to
2217 13 | moment when Calyste was hurrying to Les Touches with the~
2218 4 | woman, who smokes like an hussar, writes like a journalist,
2219 10 | of us, sing that dreadful hymn which a~poet has put into
2220 3 | de la Marine. The slight hypochondria which made~him invent his
2221 24 | Ah! madame, Shakespeare's Iago would lose all his~handkerchiefs.
2222 1 | except in the~pages of this iconography.~ ~One of the towns in which
2223 19 | her face was due North, icy enough~to freeze the Seine
2224 8 | while thinking these novel ideals superb, wanted always to~
2225 6 | atmospheric effects are almost identical. Does this~problem belong
2226 25 | fellow?"~ ~"To marry that idiot, who seems to have been
2227 8 | say that love has made him idle. We have been~warmly received
2228 18 | hours, hours of leisure and idleness,~which Paris knows better
2229 19 | smoking~cigars, playing whist, idling away their leisure, and
2230 26 | which characterizes~the idolators of the little god, and also,
2231 17 | by the quay of the Pont d'Iena,~and were fairly on the
2232 14 | lower yet into shame and ignominy, if your Beatrix is~cruelly
2233 1 | comes there. Glad to be ignored, she thinks and~cares about
2234 11 | replied Camille; "happiness ignores~everything but itself. You
2235 25 | much as by the liqueurs des Iles.~ ~"You shall never repent
2236 25 | heads will often keep an ill-~formed body unobserved.~ ~"
2237 2 | statue. Half lying, without ill-grace or affectation, in her~chair,
2238 10 | handsome Calyste~without ill-humor; but a first spasm of jealousy
2239 18 | of the house, which was ill-kept by the~proprietor. Calyste
2240 23 | Aurelie, seeing his run of ill-luck, made Rochefide play, as~
2241 19 | himself unpleasant, ugly, ill-made,~and to behave as if she
2242 16 | whom she now began~to think ill-mannered, depraved, immoral, without
2243 14 | discusses; let her be angry and ill-treat you,~and then stay away;
2244 14 | were, for a time at least, ill-treated.~ ~"They go to work like
2245 22 | patriotism or party spirit ill-understood (a compliance~which put
2246 2 | have wounded, expressed illimitable~sympathy, the tenderness
2247 2 | the Baron du Guenic was illiterate as a peasant. He~could read,
2248 19 | order to avoid some fatal illnessperhaps, I don't know, even madness~
2249 6 | the gold of her glance illuminates them~and they flame. But
2250 6 | have done;~for there the imaginations of young girls run riot.
2251 2 | splendors of its chivalry. An~imaginative man seated on the steps
2252 24 | sacrifice to opinion! I imbibe the very~spirit of my government,
2253 2 | distinct, downright, and as~immaculate as the ermine itself. We
2254 6 | irony of great minds. The immobility of the human nostril~indicates
2255 10 | perceive a delicacy so self-~immolating, a heroism so lofty as her
2256 12 | sincerity, in spite of~its immortal passion?~ ~Ask Camille how
2257 1 | broken. The character of immutability~which science gives to zoological
2258 11 | watchful eyes of Camille, who imparted it to Calyste.~All Calyste'
2259 8 | That Southern nature, that~impassioned artist is cold as a well-rope.
2260 19 | looked on the court-yard, impatient at Calyste's~non-return,
2261 15 | await a husband's death impatiently. Let him die, and~there
2262 18 | The~luckless man was again impelled to that violence which had
2263 12 | Touches.~ ~The marquise was impenetrable. Camille tried to make Calyste
2264 11 | to obey her imperious~and imperative gesture.~ ~He went home
2265 18 | If this be so, the~least imperfect human being is the woman,
2266 3 | of her~perfections or her imperfections. Dressed in the same style
2267 18 | partly conceal it; leaving imperfectly~visible the treasures of
2268 6 | social~pleasures of the imperial epoch, Felicite brought
2269 5 | theatre; but to write the~impieties that actors repeat, to roam
2270 3 | knitting-needles, and other implements that were also resonant.~
2271 23 | OF THE AGE~Such conduct implied a plan, and Madame Schontz
2272 17 | myself with~it unseen and not importunate.~ ~To you, Calyste, I shall
2273 26 | rank and quality did~not impose, who, as noble as herself,
2274 15 | to look at Calyste, and impress~upon him, by putting her
2275 8 | she chooses,~ineffaceable impressions. She has only to put on
2276 23 | public suspicion by its very~improbability. Madame Schontz intoxicated
2277 17 | are truly virgin at heart, improved by the~training of their
2278 7 | melancholy than Camille's~improvisation; it seemed like the cry
2279 17 | prepared, no doubt, like other improvisations, to which I listened~with
2280 18 | Having uttered this tirade, improvised for the hundredth time,
2281 11 | She played variations, improvising them as she played, on certain~
2282 26 | out six! If I had had the imprudence to love the marquise, Madame~
2283 8 | Calyste, do not be unwise, imprudent; try to~love only noble
2284 25 | you? Don't bind yourself~imprudently; it concerns your whole
2285 19 | courage of a criminal, and his impudence. I have just told a lie~
2286 5 | she was certain that no impure word, no~evil thought had
2287 6 | intellect floated on the impurities of knowledge while~her heart
2288 21 | woman, must teach myself impurity and all the tricks of prostitutes!~
2289 11 | to a rock which I thought inaccessible,~I will at least gather
2290 1 | those old days gave life to inanimate nature.~These relics, resisting
2291 4 | If, as a result of these inattentions, a~counter was missing from
2292 17 | from the public eye and~inaugurates the domestic hearth and
2293 15 | highest order; shedding incense on the altar where he knew~
2294 19 | not pity me,~do not seem incensed, pretend ignorance and perhaps
2295 20 | So~cruel, burning, and incessant a combat in the obvious
2296 23 | who outstrip~them by an inch or two, and the demigods
2297 9 | very wittily, many of its incidents, which made~Claude Vignon,
2298 21 | speech was uttered with such incisive bitterness that the duchess,~
2299 9 | returned the salutation with an~inclination of her head; he did not
2300 6 | the cause.~Felicite had no inclinations toward evil; she conceived
2301 6 | conducting herself she seemed inclined to marry him.~She explained
2302 19 | sculptured nymphs from their inclining urns. Sabine burst into~
2303 22 | of a friend, everything included. Aurelie accepted.~ ~Thus
2304 24 | society of young women which includes Mesdames de la Bastie, Georges~
2305 9 | Rochefide land, and examine her incognito? Calyste greatly surprised~
2306 19 | it, in spite of Sabine's incoherent attempts to relate~the facts.
2307 13 | ceased beneath the weight of incommensurable infinity? and now a~certain
2308 8 | freshness.~The chin, of incomparable distinction, is getting
2309 8 | literature, and politics, is incompetent to guide his~external life.
2310 26 | short, that woman~is as incomplete for vice as she is for virtue."~ ~"
2311 6 | She explained her conduct, incomprehensible to her friends, in various~
2312 2 | rigorously on a system of almost inconceivable economy,~which was never
2313 26 | And Maxime left the inconsolable man for the representative
2314 10 | her back, "even if we were~inconvenienced, which cannot be the case,
2315 19 | beginning to supersede the inconvenient~cabriolet of our ancestors.
2316 14 | uninhabited region with incredible rapidity.~ ~Calyste passed
2317 9 | precede love, and carve it~indelibly on the soul. At his age,
2318 8 | he considered~the utmost indelicacy, and he pitied poor Felicite.
2319 3 | the baron, was~bony, and indestructibly strong, and covered with
2320 14 | mysticism while Calyste read "Indiana,"the~first work of Camille'
2321 14 | shape of the roots would indicate to a botanist~an existence
2322 13 | air and a taciturn manner, indicated to an observer as keen~as
2323 2 | utter silence is the surest indication of an~unalterable will.~ ~
2324 16 | answer seemed to her more~indicative of madness than his silence
2325 10 | Englishman," said the marquise, indifferently.~ ~"His mother is Irish,
2326 6 | does marvels if Camille is indignant, or angry, or rebellious.~
2327 17 | owed it to the vigorous indignation I felt and showed at the
2328 20 | said to herself.~ ~These indirect comparisons with his mistress
2329 25 | thoughtful at the offer which you indirectly made to me, do not think~
2330 3 | the Abbe~Grimont has just indiscreetly revealed that on the evening
2331 8 | pampered the vice, knowing how~indispensable a woman makes herself by
2332 13 | half lying, in apparent indolence on~the divan of the little
2333 6 | languid when she pleases, indolent,~coquettish, concerned about
2334 3 | compassed the sea, the courage, indomitable, of the Breton~sailor.~ ~
2335 3 | banks of the~Loire below l'Indret. She was supposed to be
2336 6 | indulged in the hope of~inducing her to marry their sons,
2337 6 | Various ambitious mothers indulged in the hope of~inducing
2338 14 | the~traces of which are ineffaceably written here, must have
2339 1 | which connoisseurs find~inescutcheoned in the shields of many of
2340 3 | mortgaged lands as the inevitable~result of experiments. To
2341 22 | people thought Beatrix inexcusable for~deserting the best fellow
2342 12 | most women put up with;~inexorable thoughtsfrom my heart, not
2343 8 | think, a mutual sense of inexperience which separates them. The~
2344 13 | without an auxiliary, would~infallibly succumb. Camille well knew
2345 25 | to~propose mere twopenny infamies to you? No, you must go,
2346 3 | table beside~the lamp, with infantine eagerness, and the manner
2347 19 | confidences apropos of their first infants.~ ~While Calyste, a novice
2348 11 | said,"to know of Conti's~infidelities, and have to bear them!"~ ~"
2349 21 | out of the hands of the infidels."~ ~"Well, Sabine," said
2350 6 | responds to some vision of infinitude which she grasps~and contemplates
2351 13 | weight of incommensurable infinity? and now a~certain air of
2352 6 | restrain or utilize the infirmities of~womankind.~ ~Just as
2353 9 | awakened his nature; Beatrix inflamed both his heart~and thoughts.
2354 6 | chest seemed threatened with inflammation. The~doctors ordered horseback
2355 10 | Claude, with two significant~inflections of his voice, "you would
2356 6 | it has not that terrible inflexibility which makes a~sensitive
2357 25 | humiliations for every one she has inflicted~upon you."~ ~Madame Schontz
2358 6 | hitherto unobserved~physical influences? Science may some day find
2359 4 | not vice."~ ~"You are only informing me of details," said the
2360 9 | difference!" said Calyste, ingenuously.~ ~"Calyste," whispered
2361 8 | does so many people, to ingratitude. You have told me so much~
2362 17 | have sworn to repair and to inhabit~for a while very year to
2363 18 | acquaintance with Calyste. The inhaling of this scent, contact~with
2364 22 | except for the differences inherent in social zones) never~varies.
2365 9 | herself. Beatrix necessarily inherited the love which Camille had~
2366 15 | Camille replied, with an inimitable tone of irony that struck
2367 20 | well as pleasure, has its initiation. The first crisis, like~
2368 13 | cover by a quarrel a secret injury, which~would compromise
2369 15 | portrait; I did not do~her injustice, or you might have thought
2370 13 | Camille to gain the slightest~inkling of their correspondence.~ ~"
2371 18 | promises of pleasure. The inner consciousness says, without
2372 25 | allowed Camille Maupin, the innkeeper of~literature, to go into
2373 4 | mouche/, encouraged the innovation, and all the company~but
2374 5 | extent the evils which the innovative spirit of the agedescribed
2375 22 | most~aggressive or the most inoffensive virtues.~ ~Some days after
2376 11 | keen attention of~Venetian inquisitors; their souls clashed in
2377 19 | right, she might become insane."~ ~"Or lose her beauty,
2378 8 | macaroni to-day.'~He is insatiable of applause, and he wins
2379 1 | and the orthography of the inscription on the banderols beneath~
2380 2 | where weed~or damaging insect was never seen. Sometimes
2381 12 | by~moral grandeur, as the insects are attracted to the light.
2382 18 | hair, which the comb held insecurely, escaped from a cap~of lace
2383 26 | surprised at the glacial~ ~insensibility under which women extinguish
2384 2 | the ruddy colors which, by insensible gradations, sank into the~
2385 16 | You will make some changes inside the house, won't you, Calyste?"
2386 15 | a broadside of malicious insinuations.~Beatrix will then be forced
2387 12 | disappointments. Happiness has its~insolence, and I, I fear, am insolent.
2388 25 | summons," retorted Aurelie,~insolently. "But if you are afraid
2389 3 | and managed it herself, inspecting it on horseback, and~displaying
2390 8 | artist who~receives his inspirations from heaven; Art is something
2391 9 | with strings crossed on the instep~over Scotch thread stockings,
2392 22 | for the members of the~Institute; to whom they had better
2393 10 | time in his life he had instituted comparisons between his~
2394 5 | thenceforth received the~instruction which the abbe himself had
2395 7 | music in which song and instrumentation have reached a~hitherto
2396 8 | replied. "She has shown me the~insufficiency of my education at an epoch
2397 23 | which made such preference~insulting. The choice escaped all
2398 13 | which rang with such cutting insults that we do not reproduce~
2399 1 | France, which preserve so intact, to the~very middle of our
2400 22 | point~that women without any intellects proclaimed him witty, and
2401 8 | useless, and only make to intensify his passion. Their devotions
2402 25 | antithetical need with such intensity that it is rare to~meet
2403 17 | Saintly soul! she~seems intent on laying off her memories
2404 25 | Fabien's hat, forgotten intentionally, was removed very~awkwardly
2405 15 | the cavatina, he looked intently at the marquise,~giving
2406 19 | friendship by the delightful interchange of counsels, cares, and~
2407 9 | terrors and~joys in his intercourse with Camille. Such vague
2408 22 | Seine, nor by those who are~interested in the welfare of the city
2409 11 | that for you. You~must not interfere in the rather arduous task
2410 24 | scamps compromise their interlocutors.~"D'Ajuda will tell you
2411 18 | about him during~the first interlude, he saw in one of the two
2412 18 | series of excitements and interludes. Sabine,~considered happy
2413 14 | amused itself by composing interminable~arabesques where the most
2414 24 | everything, my dear mother," interposed~d'Ajuda.~ ~On the portico,
2415 12 | which~my heart does not interpret; your pride is understood
2416 23 | It was thus that Fabien interpreted the spirit of his age; he
2417 12 | happiness, which I heard her~interpreting to you the other day, "Senza
2418 18 | staircase, stopped short by the interrogation of the old footman:~"Monsieur'
2419 18 | weary~you, do I?" Charming interrogations, varied according to the
2420 13 | my dear?" said Camille,~interrogatively.~ ~"Yes," said Beatrix.~ ~"
2421 13 | cigarette from her lips to interrupt her friend.~ ~"He forgets
2422 10 | Claude to say~them without interruption and leave the young Breton,
2423 6 | catastrophes of March 20~intervened, and her future was vague
2424 18 | which even the~most solemn interviews begin when they take place
2425 5 | old man. "I was called 'l'Intime,'~the Comte de Fontaine '
2426 21 | feelings; I have become intolerable to him. She has an influence~
2427 4 | algebraic problems, and~intolerably difficult to play. All preferred
2428 7 | soothe his brain; I don't~intoxicate him! Make him drunk at dinner
2429 14 | she~added, giving him an intoxicating look, "then if you wish
2430 25 | joy, in which the double intoxication of wine and~love was secondary
2431 6 | the most~fastidious and intractable, to visit her. The diplomatic
2432 10 | Mademoiselle de Pen-Hoel (who had intrepidly returned to Guerande on~
2433 23 | the great lady, and whose~intrinsic value is real, was sure
2434 7 | modified, and lengthened~the introduction to the cavatina: "Mercy
2435 4 | chest, and other symptoms of invalidism~that he must have forgotten
2436 6 | by Nature to~resist the invasion of wrinkles; in Camille'
2437 4 | will never let the devil~inveigle him; neither will he trouble
2438 17 | So, mamma, we have rather inverted our parts, and I am the~
2439 20 | and dignity. These fatal investigations,~concealed in the depths
2440 25 | actions are like Couture's investments?you should make~them in
2441 24 | as to the meaning of an~invitation thus given. He felt certain
2442 18 | herself gracefully on a sofa, inviting Calyste by a~gesture to
2443 17 | man beloved so completely, involuntarily,~absolutely, and all the
2444 17 | relation as in all others; it involves compatibility of temper,~
2445 1 | entered by a drawbridge of iron-clamped wood, no~longer raised but
2446 25 | I am already putting~the irons in the fire."~ ~And Maxime
2447 5 | house. Its mistress leads an irregular life; she will corrupt our~
2448 12 | covers, as~with a mantle, the irregularity of their happiness; but
2449 12 | preferred the scandal of an irreparable deed to the shame of~constant
2450 8 | fixity of that~glance, cover irresolution and weakness, which the
2451 11 | old mansion.~ ~Feverish irritability, a constant absorption in
2452 22 | this world has~already irrupted elsewhere into this history
2453 25 | melancholy, made his first irruption into the nest of the dove
2454 25 | shall be singing to you Isabelle's air in~the fourth act
2455 14 | the other, with its golden~isles, its feudal towers, and
2456 20 | hers was~of glass and of Israelitish splendor.~ ~"From what quarter
2457 1 | at the~top of the globe issues a wick which passes through
2458 8 | her fan; the other hand, issuing from its ruffle of lace,
2459 13 | the /capriccio/, as the Italians say. She thought she~was
2460 4 | IV A NORMAL EVENING~/Mouche/
2461 1 | unencumbered with~vegetation; even ivy has never cast its mantle
2462 9 | IX A FIRST MEETING~What young
2463 12 | your whole existence, and Iyou see, I am frankI should
2464 2 | own. He wore a blue linen jacket~with little pockets flapping
2465 1 | The arch, supported by~two jambs, is of granite. The gate,
2466 Note| likenesses were~imagined: Jules Janin in Etienne Lousteau, Armand
2467 18 | abundant flowers in the jardinieres, was lighted~so faintly
2468 26 | perpetual wrangling and~jarring; in short, all we have that
2469 14 | their heads in huge earthen jars after the fashion of caryatides.~
2470 5 | said the old baron, with a jaunty air, "you are too~much of
2471 24 | himself~into the lioness's jaws. Beatrix has contrived to
2472 18 | goes by the~term of the /Je ne sais quoi/. Everybody
2473 5 | necktie,~trousers of gray jean, and a becoming pair of
2474 Add | Lost Illusions~ ~Espard, Jeanne-Clementine-Athenais de Blamont-Chauvry, Marquise
2475 22 | fellow on earth, and social jeers only touched the~woman.
2476 10 | paying no~attention to her jeremiads.~ ~"Good-morning, Calyste,"
2477 1 | of the~sailors in their jerkins and varnished leather caps
2478 8 | tricks of~thought of the jesters of the press, but one thing
2479 22 | painter's studio, used it half~jestingly, and produced a head which
2480 23 | the butt of her wit, her~jests, and her disdain, and turned
2481 4 | all passions have their~Jesuitism, the chevalier and the baron,
2482 25 | young count shine,~as a jeweller showing off an ornament
2483 23 | charming~lad, worked for jewellers, for manufacturers in bronze
2484 3 | her pockets. The~strangest jingling of keys and money then echoed
2485 2 | clasped the sword never, like Joan of Arc,~to relinquish it
2486 11 | Why, you are as poor as Job, my dear boy."~ ~"My father,
2487 16 | a sign from the rector, joining in the spiritual uplifting~
2488 3 | calm and pure, admitted a joke. His manner had nothing~
2489 25 | and he published in the~"Journal des Debats" a novelette
2490 6 | had so many other authors, journalists, artists, and men~of the
2491 22 | the stage~and the /petits journaux/, by his method of repeating
2492 22 | criticism. His military joviality (he had~served in the Royal
2493 2 | vassal, who followed him joyfully. The three~men of the family
2494 6 | world, a sort of female Don Juan,~without debts and without
2495 6 | woman feels, enjoys, and judges, successively; hence~three
2496 23 | of Alencon,~resigning his judgeship (a position in which his
2497 6 | the correctness of her judgments, and the solid worth of
2498 24 | naively,~remembering the judicious objection of the Abbe Brossette.~ ~
2499 10 | for one to use the~other judiciously. Beatrix is dogged by nature;
2500 6 | receiver of taxes, the /juge de paix/, the head of the
2501 8 | feet, and perform their jugglery with a sort of~innocence;
2502 Note| likenesses were~imagined: Jules Janin in Etienne Lousteau,
|