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2503 17 | how I love you.~ ~Nantes, June, 1838.~ ~Having now played
2504 6 | about Camille Maupin,~that junior of George Sand (whom she
2505 4 | postmaster says, and he's a /juste-milieu/ man who reads the~ ~papers.
2506 3 | population and the natural justices of peace, are treated as
2507 13 | us away, and is our sole~justificationbut that's the way of men, they
2508 20 | the silk of the divans is jute in their eyes, exotic~flowers
2509 14 | come over, told her of his juvenile act on the day of~her arrival.~ ~"
2510 Note| Comedy of Human Life."~K.P.W.~
2511 26 | an arrangement with the Keeper of the Seals. Fabien is
2512 9 | contrasting portraits in "keepsakes" which English~designers
2513 14 | petticoats. Many of them let~the kerchiefs which cover their bosoms
2514 3 | the four demoiselles de Kergarouet-~Pen-Hoel, (the youngest
2515 4 | induce any one to call them Kergarouet-Pen-~Hoel,not even their servants,
2516 3 | of the cajoleries of the Kergarouet-Pen-Hoels, who passed the~winters
2517 3 | device were carved upon the key-stone of the arch.~ ~"I thought
2518 26 | last~week to a regimen of kicks on the shin and perpetual
2519 6 | as an eagle bears away a kid in its talons,to~study him,
2520 15 | resists the violent grief~that kills a youth, less by the greater
2521 8 | is generous; like~Murat's kingly garments, it attracts danger.
2522 19 | kissed the spot where~the kisses of her rival were still
2523 1 | servants slept above the kitchens and stables. The pointed
2524 7 | blouse, tobacco, pipes, a~knapsack,a bizarre combination which
2525 10 | the place, and pressed her knee to make her look at Calyste.~ ~"
2526 5 | dear mother," said Calyste, kneeling down beside the baroness, "
2527 8 | press, but one thing he knewLove was~the human religion.~ ~
2528 18 | table Calyste saw jewelled knick-knacks, a book~in course of reading,
2529 3 | Pen-Hoel, taking off her knitted mittens after the usual
2530 4 | Zephirine, taking out her knitting-needle and scratching her~head.~ ~"
2531 10 | on which were tufts and knots of scarlet ribbon. She wore
2532 1 | where, on sunny days, the laboring~/paludiers/, clothed in
2533 14 | not like to wander in the~labyrinths of sentimentality and went
2534 7 | dressing-table with~its laces and mirror; together with
2535 6 | education which Felicite lacked. A man of genius, a poet~
2536 22 | of the Emperor, which now~lacks but one thing, the Emperor
2537 19 | keenly~distressed by the laconic wording of her husband's
2538 8 | hand? Are there no silken ladders for~me, no rotten trellises
2539 14 | vessel had just finished lading, therefore the~landing of
2540 10 | returned to Guerande with lagging steps, turning again and~
2541 22 | Roche-Hugon, Ronqueroles, Laginski,~Lenoncourt, found you with
2542 8 | famous words of Monsieur Laine: 'Kings are departing!'~
2543 6 | with "Adolphe," a dreadful lamentation, the counterpart of~which
2544 8 | love but the flame of its~lamp-wick? Are my longings to be satisfied
2545 18 | were well pumiced and~the landings filled with flowering plants.
2546 15 | celebrity of the~Duchesse de Langeais and the Vicomtesse de Beauseant.
2547 16 | fell, one by one, into her lap. The old Pen-Hoel gazed
2548 22 | grapnels~securely to the larger vessel. Nevertheless, about
2549 14 | Mademoiselle is the largest of all the owners," said
2550 10 | owl; to-day he is gay as a lark."~ ~"Did you tell him that
2551 25 | week the transition from larva to butterfly took place
2552 22 | she said one night, after lashing the horses for~some time
2553 17 | To make your happiness lasting, try,~my dear child, to
2554 2 | her form gained plenitude. Lastly and best of all, her~open
2555 17 | joy, or rather their money~lasts. A moralist is puzzled to
2556 5 | ladies'~boarding-school, the Latin and Greek of seminaries,
2557 25 | hat lightly~with an air of laughable gravity.~ ~"That's one way
2558 1 | which would be a subject of laughter in Paris, were it known
2559 17 | same thought,~ ~"She is launched upon the sea of life! Poor
2560 14 | Petrarch never possessed his Laura. Such~disasters fall on
2561 1 | less its winding sheet of lava. It is afoot, but not~living;
2562 26 | fault, a nullity, as the lawyers say. You have~too much good
2563 26 | adornment for the future~/layette/.~ ~"What has happened to
2564 20 | of crime, madness which lays hands on arsenic for themselves
2565 6 | his nerveless nature, his laziness, his utter~penury, his indifference
2566 8 | balls under thin lashes and lazy eyelids. Her~eyes have dark
2567 8 | outlines are thickening;~leaden tones predominate in the
2568 3 | sublimely said, the moral leaders of the~population and the
2569 14 | she rises to heaven as she leans on you; but then, my friend,"
2570 12 | thoroughbred horses want to leap a barrier, they go up to~
2571 18 | his face as in a book; she learns every quiver of its~muscles,
2572 25 | from leaving you. After a lease of six years a woman has
2573 25 | bunches grapes purpure, leaved~vert, one and two; on the
2574 14 | and dignified. Camille had~lectured Calyste on his disobedience,
2575 14 | Calyste and given him several lectures on it, by which he profited.~ ~"
2576 14 | Calyste slid down to the ledge below the bush, where he
2577 1 | table supported by a single leg~made in the shape of a vine-shoot,
2578 10 | Kergarouet. "Poor lady! is she~legally separated?"~ ~"No, by mutual
2579 14 | dressed to much advantage. A Leghorn hat with wide brims and
2580 22 | daughters of my faithful~legions," he replied to a remark
2581 3 | bonnets the~longevity of a legislature. Her nieces also made her
2582 22 | read in the newspapers: 'Lelia, belonging to~Monsieur de
2583 23 | dress, varnished boots, lemon-kid~gloves, embroidered shirt
2584 6 | torpor of meditation~often lends them an appearance of stupidity[*];
2585 7 | had varied, modified, and lengthened~the introduction to the
2586 18 | the Duc and Duchesse de Lenoncourt-Chaulieu, and all the /habitues/
2587 6 | self-sufficing, of a nature so~leonine, that a man, however little
2588 26 | marquise was left alone like a leper. Calyste~dared not, seeing
2589 8 | but a light to me; she lessens not one of my faiths; she
2590 16 | simple minds mistook~the lethargic indifference of the hapless
2591 8 | grows alarmed or disgusted, lets the time roll~by, and does
2592 19 | before she had flung into her letter-box.~ ~After breakfast Calyste
2593 6 | Nazaire custom-house and other lettered persons had not reassured
2594 1 | suppressed the seigneurs' dues~levied on inheritance.~ ~In such
2595 2 | were proper for a gentleman liable to be summoned at any moment~
2596 23 | penitentiaries, in the future of liberated galley-~slaves, in all the
2597 25 | other that faint desire for libertinism which~Jean-Jacques Rousseau
2598 6 | for whom she~wrote the librettos of two operas. But she had
2599 1 | covered by hinged pewter lids. The chimney-piece is modernized.
2600 25 | enter, he walked up to his~lieutenant, and taking him aside into
2601 23 | being alive and possessing a life-interest in a~valuable estate in
2602 10 | comparisons between his~life-long friends and the two elegant
2603 2 | could see no more than a lifeless head. The firm~outline of
2604 7 | in this~house which might lift for a moment the burden
2605 12 | asks that his Light shall lighten him, that his Sun may warm
2606 16 | first~motion of joy that lightened her mourning.~ ~"Well, Calyste,"
2607 7 | pines,~than the air seemed lighter; Guerande was a prison to
2608 10 | subduing both with the~lightning of her eyes, from which
2609 8 | eyes, through which the lightnings flashbut I, alas! I know
2610 20 | screen to obtain the half-~lights favorable to faded faces;
2611 Note| Provinces in Paris" some likenesses were~imagined: Jules Janin
2612 6 | be~circumscribed by the limitations of other women? Has that
2613 14 | heart with its soft and limpid warmth. She~breathed a sweet
2614 8 | slowly sipping a glass of /liqueur-des-iles/.~ ~"Well, what did you
2615 6 | of~Camille Maupin in the list of illustrious anonymas.
2616 10 | absent-minded or wearied listeners.~ ~Her manners, language,
2617 7 | for them the saying is literally true), prepare the mind
2618 18 | there I cram my head with~literaturebut only for myself, to distract
2619 22 | thorough knowledge of foreign literatures. She could hold~her own
2620 14 | ladder, making a sort of~litter on which they carried Beatrix.
2621 11 | maids were as lively as lizards. The viscountess lost one
2622 10 | upon a wheat-field, and lo! she was stopped in her
2623 14 | misjudged by the world she loathes, if indeed she is the~lowest
2624 13 | he who led her into those loftier regions, where suffering~
2625 14 | might remain forever~the loftiest of women in the eyes of
2626 26 | tongue, but you have fist and loins. What weights~you've carried!
2627 2 | of seventy-three; but his long-~continued guerilla warfare
2628 1 | the habits and usages of long-past times; the very stones tell~
2629 23 | following the example of the longest~heads of the bourgeoisie.
2630 10 | pleasure of sufferings~born of longing,that is one of the magnificent
2631 14 | gigantic sentinel resembles the look-out towers of old castles,~from
2632 1 | magnificence through the loop-~holes of the casemates once
2633 1 | battlements entire, its loopholes unencumbered with~vegetation;
2634 6 | manner~of Shakespeare or Lopez de Vega, published in 1822,
2635 7 | from which the Revolution~lopped its feudal rights. The /
2636 8 | never take, like the Duc~de Lorraine, a live coal in my hand?
2637 18 | gloomy~notions; she heard her lot so envied by many unhappily
2638 17 | well as the dangers of this lottery; and~that is why women weep
2639 2 | Bonchamps, and~the Prince de Loudon. Before starting he had,
2640 2 | which were secreted~double louis-d'ors), and pockets sewn to
2641 3 | pay for the results of a love-~affair, but if Calyste had
2642 17 | nothing~in this first conjugal love-speech which responded to the feelings~
2643 8 | pettiness, or vanity; their loveit is the Loire at its mouth,
2644 10 | eyes saw those trees!What a~lovely road!" he said to Gasselin.~ ~"
2645 2 | smiles, brought there by loving-kindness~inexhaustible. Her teeth
2646 2 | finely modelled brow~caught lovingly the light which played on
2647 13 | luminous look; the~mysterious lowering of eyelids,all betray, at
2648 21 | duplicity is more pleasing. I am~loyally passionate, as an honest
2649 18 | thunderbolt.~ ~From a sense of loyalty, the first thought of Sabine'
2650 26 | At a performance of "Lucia," which ends, as every one
2651 16 | visible in Calyste. With that lucidity of mind which nature gives
2652 17 | man she had deeply loved, Lucien de Rubempre, while, at~the
2653 23 | cleverest or,~if you choose, the luckiest of all parvenus, occasionally
2654 15 | superiority. You don't yet know,~luckily for you, how hampered men
2655 7 | sang to it hymns with the lullaby of cannon.~ ~Initiated by
2656 2 | from the rising of that luminary to the sinking~of it. Nevertheless,
2657 Add | Marquise d'~The Commission in Lunacy~A Distinguished Provincial
2658 16 | the air that enters my lungs does not refresh me; the
2659 26 | would have left you in the lurch without remorse. In short,
2660 8 | Paesiello. That terrible envy lurks beneath the~warmest comradeship.
2661 14 | nearly six o'clock. The luscious odors, the warm~atmosphere,
2662 2 | more nobly rounded, her lustrous skin took a finer grain;
2663 1 | nature, one of the most luxuriant and fertile~vegetations
2664 2 | great occasion, such as the~lying-in of her sister, and her nourishment,
2665 8 | classed her among frigid, lymphatic women,~and made that an
2666 6 | herself, in "L'Histoire de Ma Vie," published~long after
2667 8 | thinking: 'I ate too much macaroni to-day.'~He is insatiable
2668 21 | adored for serving~the regal Macedonian with cosmopolitan love!
2669 6 | by~the abuse of them. The macerated face of her aunt returned
2670 8 | writer; but this unpublished Machiavelli laughs within himself at
2671 11 | an instrument with more~Machiavellian penetration than the marquise
2672 26 | quarrel.~ ~Thus, by Maxime's machinations, the fire of discord flamed
2673 13 | Bruised by the working of the machinery which she herself had set
2674 21 | imitate that poor Baronne de Macumer.~Excessive passion is unfruitful
2675 13 | face,~which was that of a maddened lioness, to the astonished
2676 8 | The marquise conceived the maddest~passion for him, and took
2677 25 | on the boulevard de la Madeleine at one in the morning,you
2678 14 | adored her then as he did a Madonna. We have no~more right to
2679 8 | chivalrous. To him, all women are madonnas. One must live with him~
2680 22 | equine~race and supported a magazine devoted to hippic questions;
2681 23 | they not the swarming of~maggots in the dead body? All these
2682 14 | Understand these words to their magical extent. You~have made me
2683 23 | Heir complimented these magnificences by a greenhouse which he~
2684 14 | little things of passion magnify the world itself. It may
2685 23 | condescends to lie for the sake of magnifying the~individual self.~ ~The
2686 11 | finds absolution in the magnitude of~love, in the power of
2687 10 | talking at once, like so many magpies. The old maid was~questioning
2688 3 | the Guenics, where their mailed hand and their~device were
2689 7 | Guerande turns off from~the main road of /terra firma/, stands
2690 7 | sea which separates the mainland from the island of~Croisic.
2691 6 | whose~person his rank as major of the guards of the gate
2692 3 | fact reassuring as to his maladies, which were,~however, rather
2693 25 | save what othersAntonia,~Malaga, Cadine, or Florentinewould
2694 11 | His aunt called down maledictions on the head of Mademoiselle
2695 12 | treacherous epistle of the~malice or the snares which the
2696 18 | lesson had very cruelly maltreated the~self-love and vanity
2697 9 | saw they were a maid and a man-~servant.~ ~"Are you going
2698 1 | fruit-~trees, which the man-of-all-work, named Gasselin, takes care
2699 22 | but you buy animals as the~managers of theatres trade in artists;
2700 2 | to train his son to those manly exercises~which were proper
2701 25 | about whom~Couture, well manoeuvred by Finot and Lousteau (Lousteau
2702 21 | may be, but I ought to be~manoeuvring, tricky, hypocritical, and
2703 15 | cautiously. No one in that~old manor-house was capable of imagining
2704 1 | present~day. Because to-day mansions are sold, pulled down, and
2705 5 | thought while engaged in manual~labor. Whoever had seen
2706 23 | in the Chamber,~makes the manufacturer jealous of the statesman,
2707 23 | worked for jewellers, for manufacturers in bronze and silver-~smiths;
2708 2 | had pulled an oar in the Marais to surprise the~Blues, or
2709 2 | Breton~resistance. His skin, marbled with red blotches appearing
2710 3 | Observing Monsieur Grimont as he marched through Guerande, the most~
2711 12 | she has no~weaknesses; she marches on in all her strength;
2712 11 | hundred and fifty francs, marching night and day."~ ~"Calyste,"
2713 23 | youngest son of the late Marechal Vernon, he adorned his coat
2714 8 | marrying you to my~niece, Margaret, the daughter of your uncle,
2715 3 | carried in the early days of Marie-Antoinette. She~belonged to the very
2716 3 | fund of the Invalides de la Marine. The slight hypochondria
2717 26 | modestly. "He'll make his mark."~ ~"La Palferine has tongue,
2718 25 | I read of to-day in the market reports, /dull/."~ ~"I will
2719 19 | forth reasons sacred to marquises~in a voice quivering with
2720 17 | necessity an eternal problem. Marriageable daughters, as well as~mothers,
2721 22 | self-inflicted, or by lucky marriages, occasionally by opulence.~ ~
2722 18 | eye that froze the very marrow~of his bones. "Go,you had
2723 6 | it came to the Champ de Mars, as to a Roman~circus, to
2724 8 | Neapolitan origin,~though born in Marseilles. Conti has a brilliant mind;
2725 25 | sub-lieutenant~before a marshall of France, could refuse
2726 19 | her boiled eggs, and he marvelled at the beauty of the gold~
2727 6 | sort of mobility~which does marvels if Camille is indignant,
2728 1 | flanked~with a wall of masonry, beyond which rises a bouquet
2729 4 | being,not a stage-player, a~masquerader, a theatre woman, an author
2730 6 | one of the body-guard, was massacred at Les Carmes.~ ~Mademoiselle
2731 14 | and love struggled for the mastery. Not a~word was said by
2732 4 | despised. You can always find a match of seven thousand francs
2733 8 | by~thought, he despises materialities; and yet, if it becomes
2734 5 | English, and a teacher of mathematics was found,~not without difficulty,
2735 7 | sang the "Stay! stay!"~ ~of Matilde in "Guillaume Tell," taking
2736 16 | dining-room,~a discourse on matrimony, to which he could make
2737 19 | shall think, like the Roman matron, that my noblest~jewel is
2738 6 | Do not cold analysis and matter-of-fact theory point to~passions
2739 23 | rustic wood, with India mattings and adorned with~potteries,
2740 2 | quilted petticoat (a positive mattress, in which were secreted~
2741 8 | with the amber colors of maturity. Besides, such women~reveal
2742 26 | them, surprise Beatrix, and maul her.~She is pregnant, and
2743 5 | said the baroness.~ ~"The Maupins are an old family," said
2744 24 | have long been the king of~/mauvais sujets/, and I want to make
2745 1 | could be raised at will. The mayoralty was~blamed for having, in
2746 15 | in the famous words of Mazarin's niece to Louis~XIV.,~ ~"
2747 7 | the groves, the flowery meadows around Guerande. Her soul
2748 23 | secondary ambitions, the meanest of which resolves~to lead.
2749 11 | my happiness," she said, meaningly, with a~glance at the young
2750 22 | carotte/ has a~dozen allied meanings, but it suffices to give
2751 5 | soberly for herself. Her mind measured to its full~extent the evils
2752 19 | the ill, while he ordered measures the~success of which depended
2753 8 | his lassitude is that of a mechanic, not of an~architect. The
2754 21 | fearing lest some one might meddle between~herself and Calyste.
2755 2 | sister, or his friends, whose medical knowledge was of the slightest.~
2756 24 | counts since~Catherine de' Medici."~ ~"I will receive and
2757 6 | immensely. She wanted to meditate over the events of her life,
2758 19 | part of a system~profoundly meditated by Beatrix in this her third
2759 14 | the~smiling beauty of the Mediterranean, from comparing in depth,
2760 23 | don't perorate in public meetings upon deadly ills for the
2761 17 | family and the circle which meets at~the hotel de Guenic adore
2762 5 | little jokes, which hurt mefor she is~witty as an angel;
2763 8 | an interior in tones more mellow, peopled~with faces and
2764 18 | innocent heroines of all melodramas, by gathering flowers.~Suddenly
2765 7 | nineteenth century, in which melody and harmony blend or struggle
2766 3 | she may have visited her melons, for it had passed,~like
2767 22 | shall be there!" for the members of the~Institute; to whom
2768 8 | condemned to~love him /quand meme/."~ ~"Poor woman!" said
2769 17 | woman as the heroine of the "Memoirs of two young~Married Women."
2770 14 | hat she had worn on the memorable~day of their first excursion.
2771 6 | the coif of the statues at Memphis, and~carries out magnificently
2772 2 | and projecting teeth made menacing, was framed by a little~
2773 23 | him to take part in that~menageria of lions of all kinds. Failing
2774 18 | I felt strong enough to mention Madame de~Rochefide-whom
2775 25 | ennobled under Louis XIV.; some mercer was doubtless~their grandfather,
2776 22 | education, and her wit. He had~merged his own defects, merits,
2777 10 | wrapped in a mantle of~Scotch merino in large plaids, lined with
2778 22 | merged his own defects, merits, tastes, and pleasures in
2779 25 | perennial youth by the Comtesse Merlin, and~which is perhaps peculiar
2780 24 | young women which includes Mesdames de la Bastie, Georges~de
2781 4 | which was clear and the~metal shining, which testified
2782 6 | true secret of her literary~metamorphosis and pseudonym has never
2783 8 | all things; she can talk metaphysics and music, theology~and
2784 3 | the other hand, being as methodical as a~Dutchman, prudent as
2785 3 | presently the long,~lean, methodically-clothed person of the Chevalier
2786 3 | name of~improvements and methods; in short, mortgaged lands
2787 22 | campaign of France. He died at Metz,robbed, pillaged,~ruined.
2788 18 | to us. Ah! you once loved meyouas I deserved~to be loved by
2789 9 | the /Dunque il mio bene tu mia sarai/, the last~duet of
2790 Note| Lousteau, Armand Carrel in Michel~Chrestien, and, possibly,
2791 2 | in pictures which need a~microscope to be fully appreciated.
2792 6 | Napoleon called misfortune the midwife of~genius. This event filled
2793 20 | away. Music is sometimes mightier~than actor or poet, the
2794 Add | Ajuda-Pinto, Marquis Miguel d'~Father Goriot~Scenes
2795 22 | European streets of~Amsterdam, Milan, Stockholm, London, and
2796 26 | where he~sat as rigid as a mile-stone.~ ~The marquise conversed
2797 14 | princess disguised as a milkmaid.~ ~"She has no heart," thought
2798 22 | retired shopkeeper, quadruple millionnaire or~moderate-income man,
2799 13 | his life,~or hang like a millstone round his neck, to become
2800 13 | our eyes," said Charlotte, mimicking~the air, and attitude, and
2801 22 | genius of imitation without mimicry; he imitated seriously.~
2802 11 | remained speechless and even mindless.~ ~"Why so, Camille?" asked
2803 21 | of that woman more than mineOh! that's the end of my~patience
2804 1 | freestone~quarries, saltpetre mines, cotton factories. A few
2805 19 | boiling blood seemed to her to mingle with her nerves and yet
2806 7 | the view of Croisic, a miniature~town afloat like Venice
2807 22 | to a remark of one of his ministers, who foresaw~the future.~ ~
2808 8 | of Byron,Parisina, Effie, Minna! yes, and that royal~duchess,
2809 6 | francs laid by during~her minority by her guardians.~ ~Felicite
2810 13 | She~went over in her mind minutely the history of the past
2811 4 | would plunge into such mire?"~ ~"But is it certain?"
2812 17 | if my calculations~do not miscarry, at the moment of a ceremony
2813 14 | rivalry to fear. You are misconceived and wronged, but I know~
2814 14 | must be punished for my~misdeed, but be satisfied to know
2815 22 | duller companions, whose misdemeanors had invariably self-interest
2816 6 | never did the nose of a miser~oscillate; it contracts
2817 20 | aristocracy. Envious, poor, and miserable beings,when you see on~the
2818 25 | of his life he had lived miserably,~covering his deficits with
2819 11 | of making a poem of your miserythat's the last drop of~anguish
2820 4 | when the talk fell on the~misfortunes of the royal house. Sometimes
2821 14 | your Beatrix is~cruelly misjudged by the world she loathes,
2822 10 | thought me simple and easy to mislead as a man of genius. I am
2823 6 | But, in truth, she~was misleading both Calyste and Claude;
2824 10 | already. In this you have misled~me. I return to my misery,
2825 17 | lips of her~husband, of his misplaced love for an unworthy rival.
2826 8 | to him: the artist~is a missionary. Art is a religion, which
2827 24 | employed him on~political missions. All this will suffice to
2828 10 | and yet ill cared for; mistaking want of good manners for~
2829 1 | have been Druids, gathering mistletoe in the~sacred forests and
2830 23 | footmen without wages whom the mistresses of~households employ to
2831 3 | or the dampness of the~misty atmosphere, he exhibited
2832 14 | she was indeed~an angel misunderstood.~ ~"I am too humiliated,"
2833 3 | taking off her knitted mittens after the usual exchange
2834 24 | it is I,of course without mixing you up in~it; without its
2835 9 | were painted the words, MME. LA MARQUISE DE ROCHEFIDE.
2836 1 | poplars along the banks of the~moat to shade the promenade.
2837 1 | with its doughty walls, its moats are full~of water, its battlements
2838 10 | in him," he said,~with a mocking smile, "and be proud of
2839 6 | harmony with the faultless~modelling of the head. The black and
2840 22 | quadruple millionnaire or~moderate-income man, great seigneur or bourgeois,
2841 1 | lids. The chimney-piece is modernized. Its~condition proves that
2842 22 | rejected both~ancients and moderns, and strove to make themselves
2843 26 | replied the Comte de Trailles,~modestly. "He'll make his mark."~ ~"
2844 4 | improper fashion, making it a~Mohammedan paradise where the houris
2845 18 | bosom, was of pearl-gray moire with large open~sleeves,
2846 18 | flabby,~something between a mollusk and a bit of coral, dares
2847 14 | southern~climes, a tint of molten silver; on the shore it
2848 15 | of her~faults in that one momentaffected him so deeply that he was
2849 5 | These~questions were as momentous to her simple soul as the
2850 16 | glorious old defender of the monarchy, he knelt beside him,~watching
2851 3 | did of four daily meals~of monastic amplitude. His bodily frame,
2852 11 | maliciously at her friend. "Monday~you said we had engagements;
2853 22 | varies. The heart and the money-box are always in the same exact
2854 8 | Would you make me a married monk? No! I~have eaten of the
2855 4 | rector, who was substituting monologue~for dialogue unconsciously
2856 19 | service, a present from a monomaniac lord, for whom Conti had
2857 3 | the risk of being~called a monopolist, and clinging to those grain-sacks
2858 14 | motions of the head, and~rare monosyllables when spoken to; Camille'
2859 21 | teeth. A fresh complexion is monotonous;~some men prefer their doll'
2860 2 | times and seasons, this monotony, like that of~Nature varied
2861 12 | lurking in the path, and monsters in drops of~water. I am
2862 6 | to the Abbe Grimont~this monstrous creature, a cross between
2863 6 | finest houses in the rue~Mont Blanc, where she installed
2864 17 | her house in the rue du Mont-Blanc, for which a~party of speculators
2865 5 | Grand-Jacques,' the Marquis de Montauran the~'Gars.' I was the friend
2866 8 | himself. The Comtesse de Montcornet told~him of a young lady
2867 22 | English groom, which cost him monthly from four to five thousand~
2868 22 | speculation, along the~heights of Montmartre, pitching their tents in
2869 22 | immortality, like the~late Montyon."~ ~By dint of being prodded,
2870 9 | s intention, and, in the mood in which he~then was, nothing
2871 8 | stupendous; or, in other moods, they can utter despairing
2872 4 | mouche/ as Negroes stone the moon in the water~when the weather
2873 10 | monsieur? Why, we are on the moor!"~ ~The coach, which was
2874 8 | duchess, whom I saw on the moors among the furze and the
2875 17 | rather their money~lasts. A moralist is puzzled to decide on
2876 18 | buried in~the soul that moralists have not yet uncovered that
2877 1 | which connects it with the~Morbihan. The arrondissement road
2878 13 | how did they employ their mornings, and why were~they alone
2879 16 | from~day to day, he grew morose; he seemed to love no one;
2880 13 | sentiments than those of ordinary~mortals. Calyste shall tell you
2881 26 | weep). 'And Fabien, he' (mortify him by~comparing him with
2882 19 | to excess.~Fallen into a mortifying position through Conti's
2883 14 | deposit the most extraordinary~mosaic of brilliant pebbles, and
2884 10 | has put into the mouth of Moses speaking to the Almighty: '
2885 1 | with little~flowers and mosses through the fissures between
2886 | mostly
2887 9 | fatigue, was of the~purest mother-of-pearl, her skin was as dazzling
2888 26 | marries~me in spite of his old motherbut /you/'"~ ~"I see! I see!"
2889 9 | good, with a poet," and she~motioned to Claude, "on one side,
2890 25 | pushed the critic's foot, motioning to Rochefide), "she would~
2891 11 | hundred sous~by accumulated /mouches/, which so excited the cupidity
2892 14 | My friend," she said, mounting with slow steps the magnificent
2893 16 | baron's coffin as chief mourner. The church and the~little
2894 6 | which coincides with the mournful~period of old age. In Mademoiselle
2895 10 | pointing to~Calyste, who was mournfully following with Charlotte, "
2896 2 | sun, watching for a field-~mouse or the terrible grub of
2897 20 | pecking at two or three mouthfuls.~ ~"Wasn't it good?" Sabine
2898 7 | which~she attached to the mouthpiece and used only once, set
2899 10 | Paimboeuf and the magnificent~Mouths of the Loire as they struggle
2900 8 | that ancient hall, were a moving domestic~harmony.~ ~Fanny
2901 | Mrs
2902 18 | noblest and purest hearts the mud and slime cast~up by hurricanes
2903 25 | me free to retire from my mud-~hole in a proper manner.
2904 7 | the traveller comes upon a mud-hut, where the~custom-house
2905 14 | were leaning on the low mud-walls~that divided the different
2906 2 | slow, and obstinate as~mules, but always following steadily
2907 7 | and gather~the salt into /mulons/; a space which the saline
2908 12 | heart,~too overflowing, too multifarious not to be the essence, the
2909 8 | that they~wrapped round mummies. Personally, Beatrix is
2910 22 | least grateful for this munificence; she knew the~motive of
2911 8 | personality is generous; like~Murat's kingly garments, it attracts
2912 14 | deathbut suffering!" she murmured to~Felicite, in a feeble
2913 22 | Valentino's (the~first stage to Musard) she danced in a gown, hat,
2914 7 | Felicite was giving him music-lessons. To him the~grand apartments
2915 17 | in goblets to volleys of musketry, accompanied by cries of~"
2916 25 | Orgon. In any case, you~mustn't look like a fool; come
2917 21 | you find your conscience~muttering," he added. "But why, instead
2918 17 | instead of deceiving ourselves mutually~about our characters and
2919 19 | I saw," she said~later, "myriads all at once."~ ~She rang
2920 18 | last. Not onlyI said~to myselfdo I lose love, but I have
2921 10 | sister, my daughter, and~myselfto inconvenience you."~ ~"Sister,
2922 7 | varnished.~Nothing was ever more mysteriously melancholy than Camille'
2923 21 | expression more mysterious than mystical, animated that truly~apostolical
2924 17 | had the fate of all things mythological. Dear,~beloved mother, could
2925 1 | season. The~door, of oak, nail-studded, gives entrance to a noble
2926 6 | This celebrated man, who is nameless, may be~regarded as the
2927 12 | Madame du Guenic, without naming her son or the~marquise,
2928 2 | folding it daily in a damp napkin), drew inward to~the mouth
2929 25 | married couple in Rome, Naples, Florence,in~short, wherever
2930 8 | trenches on~the fable of Narcissus. Besides that feeling of
2931 4 | interrupted now and then by narratives of events in~the town, or
2932 6 | nostril~indicates a certain narrowness of soul; never did the nose
2933 21 | permit myself some rather~nasty actions"~ ~"You don't mean
2934 1 | year;~but a vote of the National Assembly suppressed the
2935 5 | adventuresYou knew all that, my naughty child, and you never~said
2936 4 | might be alike, but the nautical~hero had singular advantages
2937 22 | horses of France and of Navarre could enter into one~great
2938 12 | the reputation of having~navigated in his youth the waters
2939 18 | goes by the~term of the /Je ne sais quoi/. Everybody knows
2940 8 | great composer, a man of Neapolitan origin,~though born in Marseilles.
2941 7 | he went more slowly as he~neared the top, perceiving something
2942 10 | Constant, who, however, were nearer of an age than you and~Calyste.
2943 14 | of which I~shall make a necklace more precious far to me
2944 20 | serpents with diamond heads, necklaces~clasped around their necks,
2945 5 | buttons, a blue foulard necktie,~trousers of gray jean,
2946 2 | curling on the nape~of her neckwhich are a sign of race. This
2947 14 | Marquise de~Rochefide, /nee/ de Casteran, father."~ ~
2948 19 | were~like so many red-hot needles heated in the fire of a
2949 2 | work for which~sight is needless. Both eyes had cataracts;
2950 4 | bowed gravely, making a negative gesture which was not a~
2951 6 | She had, not unnaturally,~neglected the minor accomplishments.
2952 12 | the alley of her house, neglecting~Thisbe. The secret of Thisbe'
2953 26 | fainting on the sofa. Then she negotiated in order~to gain time; she
2954 24 | can conduct that~difficult negotiation, it is I,of course without
2955 8 | Eve the fair would seem a Negress. She is slender and~straight
2956 8 | Brabancon seigneur, while a Negro beside them~poured golden
2957 4 | accused their /mouche/ as Negroes stone the moon in the water~
2958 16 | and acquaintances in the~neighboring chateaus. But the youth
2959 2 | and the trampling~of the neighing horses.~ ~Gasselin was one
2960 6 | the world. She knew his nerveless nature, his laziness, his
2961 6 | the heroine of the~Tour de Nesle was falsely accused of doing;
2962 25 | first irruption into the nest of the dove of the~rue de
2963 8 | strove to hold him in the net of their~tenderness and
2964 7 | one of those red~chenille nets, much worn in those days,
2965 20 | eyes, exotic~flowers are nettles, perfumes poison, the choicest
2966 11 | tissue suffered~the blue network of swollen veins to be visible,
2967 25 | is to-day what the Pont Neuf was in 1650; all persons
2968 18 | additional guarantees to this neutral~sort of union, guarantees
2969 22 | fine apartment in the rue Neuve-Saint-~Georges. Arthur, who could
2970 22 | artists, men of letters, new-fledged to fame, who rejected both~
2971 18 | escape the crying of the~newly weaned child, Calyste, on
2972 25 | should make~them in the nick of time."~ ~At that moment
2973 22 | giver of the feast~who is niggardly.~ ~Madame Schontz had too
2974 13 | these researches during a night-time of painful struggle. Calyste
2975 26 | one of the most~horrible nightmares of my life and delivered
2976 8 | his name, in the Arabian~Nights. You would be too late,
2977 9 | them, like the~rays of a nimbus around the heads of divine
2978 | ninety
2979 10 | uselessly.~ ~"You little ninny!" whispered Camille, lightly
2980 26 | for La Palferine.~ ~On the ninth day Calyste received a line
2981 7 | ambassador. She filled the nipple with~patchouli, cleaned
2982 18 | Blue-Beard the desire that~nips all women to know if their
2983 | nobody
2984 26 | manner which obtained a nod of approbation from Maxime.~ ~ ~"
2985 26 | have reached."~ ~Maxime nodded his head, and played for
2986 25 | dropped du Tillet's arm, and~nodding to the young Prince of Bohemia
2987 26 | little country-house at~Nogent-sur-Marne. They'll recover their eyesight
2988 22 | first year, she made ignoble noises in the antechamber with
2989 4 | is only surpassed in the nomenclature of the~Academy by that of
2990 19 | impatient at Calyste's~non-return, uneasy without knowing
2991 15 | gallantry~obliges us to make nooses to catch our happiness.
2992 8 | vessel, Danish, Swedish, or Norwegian, in the offing."~ ~This
2993 7 | for Paris, I tell him; the nostalgia of criticism~is on him;
2994 6 | immobility of the human nostril~indicates a certain narrowness
2995 17 | Leopold Hannequin, the family notary, explained the~preliminaries
2996 1 | instrument~would have been notched, if not broken. The character
2997 19 | But you wrote on a woman's note-paper; it had a perfume of feminine~
2998 8 | Belisarious, and Constantine are noted exceptions to this~rule.~ ~
2999 9 | ingenuous admission of his nothingness could be read~upon his face
3000 19 | your coronet, which I never~noticedI saw but you! Fortunately
3001 10 | house; he heard, but~without noticing, the opening and shutting
3002 24 | coming to dinner. That meant notifying her to display all her luxury,~
|