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Honoré de Balzac
Beatrix

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(Hapax - words occurring once)


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3003 18 | education, cast aside her gloomy~notions; she heard her lot so envied 3004 18 | she wanted some terrible notoriety as~a vengeance, and she 3005 22 | Without the Aspasias of the Notre-Dame~de Lorette quarter, far 3006 22 | of~being /carotte/. The noun has become a verb. From 3007 16 | devil's~kitchen doesn't nourish him."~ ~"He is in love," 3008 25 | the~"Journal des Debats" a novelette which won him in a few days 3009 4 | triumphed in Brittany over~novelties.~ ~While the rector was 3010 21 | made a vownot counting a novenato give twelve~hundred francs 3011 19 | infants.~ ~While Calyste, a novice in falsehood, was saying 3012 17 | Certainly the mother of the novices has no~conception of the 3013 2 | to show his masters the~noxious beast that had occupied 3014 4 | their play~is held to be null. The players can exchange 3015 26 | have a radical fault, a nullity, as the lawyers say. You 3016 10 | the lock of which is the numeral 50!"~ ~"Why has love fled 3017 19 | have enlarged since I~have nursed and cradled your child! 3018 5 | noblest Irish blood, had been nurtured by his mother with the utmost~ 3019 1 | reed of~brass, drawing the nut-oil held in the globe through 3020 2 | how large was the heap of nuts in the barn; and~how many 3021 19 | the waters~of sculptured nymphs from their inclining urns. 3022 17 | at farmhouses, dinners on~oaken tables, covered with centenary 3023 2 | hands which had pulled an oar in the Marais to surprise 3024 7 | overlooks. The park is an oasis in the surrounding desert, 3025 17 | Verneuil, and exchanging oaths enough~to satisfy three 3026 2 | in the barn; and~how many oats remained in the bin without 3027 6 | men, to whom~society made obeisance at that period. She had, 3028 17 | heads instead of~your feet,'objecting, as he did, to austerities 3029 24 | remembering the judicious objection of the Abbe Brossette.~ ~ 3030 6 | effect, and saw only its~objectionable side. Her superior mind 3031 10 | was much surprised at the objections raised by her elder sister,~ 3032 11 | it; it would then be an~oblation, not a suicide. Ah, Beatrix, 3033 7 | affections that are not obligatory, in~short, escape us. Suffering 3034 15 | to accept when gallantry~obliges us to make nooses to catch 3035 6 | to escape fame~and remain obscure, while offering a man's 3036 11 | sentiment~being dark and obscured by clouds to her mind, she 3037 26 | third of a box at the Opera, obscurely situated~on the lower tier 3038 20 | interest to mere nothings,~to observations pursued even to matters 3039 6 | amazed philosophers~and observers, had any one in Nantes even 3040 15 | are some provincial women obtuse or silly or malicious enough 3041 20 | incessant a combat in the obvious and, as we may~call them, 3042 3 | respectfully to the three occupants of the room,~and addressed 3043 25 | education, by the station they occupy, chained by the rank of 3044 15 | of the bodily functions~occur. Later, the organs have 3045 26 | that you are in need of~an oculist."~ ~Maxime could not help 3046 3 | resigned and went to live at Odessa, near the Duc de~Richelieu, 3047 19 | had left that adulterous odor! She had just kissed the 3048 17 | May, 1838.~ ~I take up my Odyssey. On the third day your children 3049 13 | no fancy for the role of OEdipus; I know you have the wit 3050 11 | there. Beatrix at last took offence at what she thought~Camille' 3051 14 | pardon of the man I have offended. I will never~run the risk 3052 17 | a young woman learning, officially, as it~were, that she owed 3053 7 | where the~custom-house officials lie in wait for him. This 3054 18 | the shining of a perfumed oil. Her white~brow sparkled. 3055 5 | splendid offspring of the oldest Breton race and the~noblest 3056 6 | form. She has that~skin, olive by day and dazzling by candlelight, 3057 25 | facilitate my retreat from the~Olympic circus by a fine marriage? 3058 26 | secure of their rank in Olympus cast upon others who have 3059 17 | in these rooms; may~the omen be a happy one for you, 3060 8 | hours the fatal~power of omnipotent analysis. He is far too 3061 8 | her nose, which describes one-~quarter of a circle, is 3062 9 | never obtain~applause of one-half the value of that child' 3063 25 | As Maxime got into his~one-horse equipage, he thought to 3064 22 | father to me; can~you give me one-tenth of a reason why I should 3065 7 | else. I will sacrifice no oneYes, it was too late, yesterday,~ 3066 24 | wivern or, darting fire, ongle gules, and scaled vert, 3067 10 | which gave an impression to onlookers~that the viscountess bored 3068 18 | since I saw you last. Not onlyI said~to myselfdo I lose 3069 1 | flower-strewn robe floats onward,~the golden mantle of her 3070 25 | which was buttoned with opals, and her hair in~bands as 3071 22 | unfortunately,~neither husbands nor openings in life are offered to them 3072 23 | third with Arthur in her opera-box and at first~representations; 3073 17 | learned how to~use their opera-glasses. Sabine was a girl of this 3074 26 | reached the peristyle of the opera-house by~the lower corridor just 3075 10 | he will have~plenty of opportunities to see her," said his mother.~ ~" 3076 25 | two natures of woman, so opposed to~each other, have at the 3077 26 | again, by the fear which~oppresses all women who have been 3078 12 | cold, distant,~jealous, and oppressive.~ ~It is forbidden to you 3079 6 | pupil is surrounded by an orange circle; it is of~bronze 3080 18 | now for the fourth time an orator in the Chamber, and~aspiring 3081 25 | own principality, the one orb on its decline,~the other 3082 2 | black eyes in their brown~orbits, casting thence the last 3083 6 | from judging soberly.~ ~Ordinarily a woman feels, enjoys, and 3084 23 | defunct. These parasitic~organizations reveal decomposition; are 3085 26 | Trailles. Perhaps no well-~organized beings exist who do not 3086 8 | will~be in music and her orgies literary.' Rochefide, however, 3087 25 | make you as happy as an Orgon. In any case, you~mustn' 3088 3 | gingerbread-colored candle called an /oribus/ which is still~used in 3089 8 | what you provincials call originality, which is simply independence 3090 25 | jeweller showing off an ornament in hopes to sell it, makes 3091 1 | point, a~feature of the ornamentation would dissipate them. The 3092 1 | Louis XV. period,~and is ornamented with a mirror, let in to 3093 8 | in the department of the Orne, a Mademoiselle~Beatrix-Maximilienne-Rose 3094 24 | or his younger brother,~Orosmanes, or Saint-Preux, Rene, Werther, 3095 2 | secreted~double louis-d'ors), and pockets sewn to a 3096 1 | century; the~style and the orthography of the inscription on the 3097 6 | did the nose of a miser~oscillate; it contracts like the lips; 3098 3 | round basket made of fine osier, a pile of~ivory counters 3099 18 | material the maidens of~Ossian, so poetically painted by 3100 2 | choice old men whom Van Ostade, Rembrandt,~Mieris, and 3101 8 | he said, with innocent ostentation, looking at~Claude, who 3102 1 | globe, about the size of an ostrich egg, which is~fastened into 3103 20 | the opera chanced to be "Otello." When Rubini sang~/Il mio 3104 24 | handkerchiefs. People think that Othello, or his younger brother,~ 3105 25 | have made him save what othersAntonia,~Malaga, Cadine, or Florentinewould 3106 17 | which bore high our banner)ouf! I am at~Nantes.~ ~But oh! 3107 11 | in her morning dress was outlined in white against the~dark 3108 7 | from the marshes and a few outlying farms of over ten thousand 3109 18 | exhausted! This is the first outpouring~of my heart for a long, 3110 26 | blow to her pride, that outrage which~women secure of their 3111 22 | the draggled tail of an outrageously muddy~gown. In short, she 3112 25 | and Fabien each tried~to outstay the other, without success; 3113 13 | which had flown so high on outstretched wings that the~fall was 3114 23 | talent to disparage those who outstrip~them by an inch or two, 3115 26 | Calyste, whose horse had outstripped those of~the other carriages.~ ~" 3116 2 | tenderness, you will find her outward~graces; she is doing good 3117 9 | their breasts and darts outwardly about them, like the~rays 3118 14 | hardness. A woman is always~over-excited when she discusses; let 3119 5 | the mother. Without being over-pious or ridiculous, the idolized 3120 13 | over-reaching her, was she being over-reached~herself? was she only a 3121 13 | by~Felicite? instead of over-reaching her, was she being over-reached~ 3122 11 | the~prospect, was suddenly overclouded.~ ~"What are you afraid 3123 19 | fact he played~too well,he overdid the part; but Sabine had 3124 9 | expanded into gaiety that overflowed in sarcasm. He maintained 3125 12 | gushings from the heart,~too overflowing, too multifarious not to 3126 11 | the door, fearing to be overheard;~for women have an amazing 3127 6 | fell ill; her blood~was overheated, and her chest seemed threatened 3128 2 | of her, she~adored her, overjoyed to be left in control of 3129 20 | the bad angel has never~overshadowed. Calyste's silence terrified 3130 13 | a horrible discomposure overspread~her face and frightened 3131 22 | famous treaty of London which~overturned the ministry of March 1st. 3132 12 | bitter~ridicule that would overwhelm me if my eyes or my manner 3133 10 | The viscountess was overwhelming in thanks, and complained 3134 10 | Yesterday he~was dull as an owl; to-day he is gay as a lark."~ ~" 3135 6 | supplies the living, thinking oxide which gives~such seduction 3136 Note| Comedy of Human Life."~K.P.W.~ 3137 10 | fellow started at a great pace, until Gasselin asked him 3138 16 | regularly to Les Touches. He paced round~and round the lawn, 3139 17 | After this poem of our pacific Restoration had been sung, 3140 26 | and leaving Paris with his pacified angel. It was one of~those 3141 9 | laden with~baggage,trunks, packages, bags, and chests,the shape 3142 26 | Calyste is having his trunks packed secretly, and he has taken 3143 15 | Guerande, the servants were packing~Conti's travelling-carriage, 3144 8 | and stuck~a stiletto into Paesiello. That terrible envy lurks 3145 12 | but my divinity. I was a pagan;~I am now a Christian, that 3146 10 | and from which is seen Paimboeuf and the magnificent~Mouths 3147 10 | Beatrix and Camille. She was painfully aware of the stockings soiled~ 3148 7 | bizarre combination which paints Felicite.~ ~Every great 3149 6 | receiver of taxes, the /juge de paix/, the head of the Saint-~ 3150 8 | forever at Chiavari, to buy a palazzo in Venice, a summer-~house 3151 14 | watched his charming face,~paled by his feelings and his 3152 16 | Calyste, seeing the mortal~paleness on his father's face, for 3153 17 | slightly changed, thinner and paler; but she seemed much~pleased 3154 6 | brightest tints of Nature's palette, and the richest setting.~ ~ 3155 21 | the duchess was an~open palm for charity, she was worth 3156 6 | classics and the~romanticists palpitated on all sides,in the newspapers, 3157 9 | music. The passage /Di tanti palpiti/ expresses love~in all its 3158 12 | attention than if she were a /paludiere/."~ ~Remembering that the 3159 8 | a gourmand, and Felicite pampered the vice, knowing how~indispensable 3160 4 | squandering her fortune among pamphleteers, painters, musicians, a~ 3161 8 | Calyste, and snipe, and~pancakes such as I know you can't 3162 14 | to mix~with the Chartreux pansies which also grow in that 3163 7 | flowers and the Chartreux pansy; that~lake of salt water, 3164 18 | handle of a dagger used~as a paper-cuttersymbol of criticism! Finally, on 3165 8 | hieroglyphics perhaps, or the papyrus that they~wrapped round 3166 23 | private life, on a line parallel with political life, the~ 3167 12 | intellect, weakens my strength, paralyzes my tongue,~and bends my 3168 10 | she turned away~toward the parapet to hide them. Calyste followed 3169 23 | image of the defunct. These parasitic~organizations reveal decomposition; 3170 10 | gloved hand on a slender parasol. Nothing is finer to the 3171 19 | does not pardon it. Such pardons can only be brought~by a 3172 6 | Parisian women came. The parentage of~Mademoiselle des Touches, 3173 25 | Palferine, in the style of a~parenthesis.~ ~"My dear fellow, you 3174 3 | power is contested by their parishioners, and who~instead of being, 3175 8 | pages of Scott, of Byron,Parisina, Effie, Minna! yes, and 3176 3 | yellow as the~parchment of a Parliament record, wrinkled as a lake 3177 19 | in poor Sabine this first paroxysm of madness.~ ~"Ursula, I 3178 15 | Beatrix will then be forced to parry with false assertions and~ 3179 4 | closing of the door of the parsonage echoed~behind him.~ ~ ~ 3180 9 | as he had been, and now partially emancipated,~was likely 3181 14 | good/ lady."~ ~The two parties bowed and separated.~ ~" 3182 25 | alien interest~in one of the partners. The next day when Arthur 3183 22 | kind heart~like that for a /parvenu/ like you. You couldn't 3184 20 | CERTAINTY: BUT NOT FROM PASCAL'S POINT OF VIEW~When a woman 3185 20 | by~the gentleness of the paschal lamb. She wished, also, 3186 5 | sit up for me? I have a pass-key and the tinder-box."~ ~" 3187 16 | features~betrayed an utterly passive being. The baron, worn out 3188 17 | Invalides, the barrier of Passy by the quay of the Pont 3189 5 | innocence into the hands of the pastor,~who, out of true reverence 3190 7 | She filled the nipple with~patchouli, cleaned the /bochettino/, 3191 6 | his own; for his spiritual~paternity was blind. Such mental labor, 3192 9 | Giulietta," one of the most pathetic~pages of modern music. The 3193 8 | reaches the most~dishevelled pathos that any German professor 3194 14 | arrived through the narrow~pathway. The marquise walked first 3195 22 | to accept its picturesque patois. /Tirer une carotte/ has 3196 7 | contrasted with the dull and~patriarchal world of Guerande, in the 3197 22 | absurdities~generated by patriotism or party spirit ill-understood ( 3198 22 | mistress. She then began to patronize a few young men,~artists, 3199 2 | slightest.~To them these solemn pauses of a life without reproach, 3200 25 | and the next morning the pavements are dry and frozen so hard~ 3201 24 | I shall have chosen~the pawns on my chess-board to carry 3202 19 | box at the Opera by equal payments.~The two young women, Ursula 3203 17 | gates and the cows grace peacefully on the grass~in the halls ( 3204 14 | edges, a short blouse, a peaked cap,~and, by way of staff, 3205 18 | of a white bosom, was of pearl-gray moire with large open~sleeves, 3206 9 | nothing to say; a slight sweat pearled upon his forehead and wet 3207 8 | those hot tears fell, two~pearls of sorrowful motherhood, " 3208 2 | had taken the warm and~pearly tones which painters adore. 3209 14 | discharge the salt, which the peasant-women then bear away~on their 3210 11 | they pile it up as we do peat in Paris."~ ~"What! will 3211 20 | take away his plates after~pecking at two or three mouthfuls.~ ~" 3212 8 | does not find in Italy the pecuniary gains~which composers obtain 3213 26 | such things. So I changed pedals. I began to entice my judicial 3214 1 | crowned with a circular pediment, now wreathed with vegetation, 3215 21 | know it by his joy; and his peevishness tells me as~plainly when 3216 25 | making.~She wore a guipure pelerine of spidery texture, a gown 3217 15 | she had really paid the penalty of her~faults in that one 3218 23 | Rochefide, who thought she had a penchant for the young~and witty 3219 11 | fine sand, where~the sea penetrates and lies like a lake in 3220 11 | with more~Machiavellian penetration than the marquise throughout 3221 1 | chiefly managed at Croisic, a peninsular village which communicates~ 3222 2 | before the affair of La~Penissiere, or the house of Guenic 3223 21 | the cases about~which his penitent sent for him; but as the 3224 23 | the cause~of Poland, in penitentiaries, in the future of liberated 3225 22 | Aurelie did not ask for a~penny of it. Like the gentleman 3226 3 | defined itself in black on the~penumbra of the portico.~ ~"Welcome, 3227 8 | interior in tones more mellow, peopled~with faces and forms so 3228 7 | garment made~like a Greek peplum gave to view a pair of cambric 3229 1 | the sister-tower, with a pepper-pot. This is how those~charming 3230 | per 3231 22 | living advertisements, these~perambulating articles, soon set up Madame 3232 7 | some old castle formerly perched there. A large panelled~ 3233 8 | modern luxury,~aided by the perfecting of handicrafts, now gives 3234 7 | reached a~hitherto unknown perfection. He saw before his eyes 3235 8 | genius like Rossini than a performer like Rubini. I had~committed 3236 14 | confronting some imaginary~peril.~ ~She was the first to 3237 8 | first days of marriage are perilous for little minds as~well 3238 2 | Republic, his exile, the perils of~his five crossings through 3239 22 | Let us sketch the four periods of this happiness. It is 3240 14 | where she had so nearly perished.~ ~"Will you go with me 3241 20 | mere existence,if it is permissible to apply to the body a word~ 3242 6 | rather longer than modern art~permits.~ ~Mademoiselle Felicite 3243 23 | and cure them; they~don't perorate in public meetings upon 3244 23 | ills for the pleasure of~perorating.~ ~Fabien du Ronceret, without 3245 1 | worked, for a family in perpetuity. Hence the grandeur of~these 3246 12 | Calyste was standing in deep perplexity; how could he send that~ 3247 8 | are plunging. You are the Perseus of a~poor Andromeda; you 3248 12 | martyrdom.~ ~But if you persist in this cold silence, this 3249 9 | designers and engravers seek so persistently. Here were the force and~ 3250 25 | pupil. If Madame Schontz persists in keeping on the hind heels 3251 8 | laugh at themselves. Their personality is generous; like~Murat' 3252 3 | nobility, pride, and grandeur personified.~At the moment when you 3253 21 | were to free Calyste by persuading Monsieur de~Rochefide to 3254 17 | have cast~her, daring and perverted, bound hand and foot, before 3255 12 | a delightful Thisbe, the pet of Madame~l'Amirale de Kergarouet, 3256 6 | love, a~lip like the outer petal of a pomegranate such as 3257 20 | sacred~confidence, the golden petals of the One only love, with 3258 16 | during the~emigration, at St. Petersburg, the climate of which killed 3259 22 | first under the name of La Petite-Aurelie, to~distinguish her from 3260 22 | wit of the stage~and the /petits journaux/, by his method 3261 14 | saw his Beatrice again; Petrarch never possessed his Laura. 3262 17 | whom fame has been like a~pharos, warning her of the only 3263 9 | known to pass through all phases of~preparation and to reach 3264 1 | past, count for much in the phenomena of~retrospection; but the 3265 1 | tape-worm in a surgeon's phial. The windows which look~ 3266 6 | of a pomegranate such as Phidias might have~carved, and the 3267 6 | body, would have amazed philosophers~and observers, had any one 3268 25 | little town!" cried Aurelie,~philosophically. "I have heard so much of 3269 16 | consult the most experienced physicians, for~it would cost over 3270 1 | customs, their unchangeable physiognomies. The public~square is filled 3271 22 | against all second-class pianists. And, remark this! she~behaved 3272 8 | definite aim or system. The pickaxe of his criticism demolishes, 3273 5 | will ruin him," she said, picking up the paper.~ ~"My dear 3274 8 | beautiful, noble, elegant,~pictured in the books and in the 3275 1 | it by Saint-Nazaire, the picturesqueness of~its position and the 3276 12 | having~faced the fire of a piercing glance from Camille, to 3277 25 | don't mean that?but the pigeon won't fly."~ ~"And he is 3278 26 | playing the fable~of 'The Two Pigeons,' that is all."~ ~Calyste 3279 20 | hearts, I am sure.~We are piling up riches for you here. 3280 22 | He died at Metz,robbed, pillaged,~ruined. In 1814 Napoleon 3281 1 | the window-casings~and the pillars, above which grotesque faces 3282 15 | he laid his head on the pillow where hers had lain.~ ~" 3283 8 | quarter of a circle, is pinched about the nostrils; very 3284 7 | its trimmed and twisted pine-trees,~some being trained to the 3285 22 | amusement during the time she pined as under-mistress at Saint-~ 3286 8 | led the Carlone to murder Piola, and stuck~a stiletto into 3287 22 | would be built in Paris. Pioneers~in fresh stucco, they have 3288 3 | counters yellow as a Turkish pipe after twenty years' usage, 3289 8 | the hand comes out like a pistil from a calyx, and could 3290 17 | noisy than the shots of a pistol~gallery. In a few minutes 3291 19 | use of contempt as a~moral piston, a constant comparison of 3292 26 | way for you to do~is to pitch Arthur out of the window 3293 22 | the~heights of Montmartre, pitching their tents in those solitudes 3294 1 | Louis XIV. in the depths of Pitou, and of still more ancient 3295 6 | receiving~emissaries of Pitt and Coburg. The 9th Thermidor 3296 14 | but majestic, like the Pitti palace, that other~imitation 3297 5 | itself in~that calm and placid home.~ ~"I fear that woman 3298 16 | ran her~hands through the placket-holes of her gown, unfastened 3299 10 | of~Scotch merino in large plaids, lined with green silk, 3300 8 | he dined at~home. Breton plainness fought against Parisian 3301 7 | the prayer of a hidden plaint, the groan~of repressed 3302 Note| well-~known critic Gustave Planche.~ ~The opening scene of 3303 1 | too rugged and too hard to plane; its instrument~would have 3304 1 | those discovered on the plank ceilings~of Tristan's house 3305 15 | triumphs or our most~carefully planned happiness. I have seen that 3306 1 | the mullioned windows are plastered~up to avoid the window-tax. 3307 1 | architect, the brush of the plasterer,~nor have they staggered 3308 9 | slow gestures, effects less~plastic and less studied than we 3309 22 | furniture, a complete service of plate,~twelve hundred francs a 3310 2 | alterations of that beauty Plato would have glorified as 3311 6 | friendships seemed purely platonic. There was, moreover, nothing~ 3312 4 | rectoras it was~to the other playersthat the poor priest could not 3313 12 | The baroness listened pleasantly to the old hero, who, faithful 3314 10 | a chemisette body and a pleated collar, was fated to appear,~ 3315 2 | outlines of her form gained plenitude. Lastly and best of all, 3316 10 | on which her tears fell plentifully. "No,~Calyste; forget what 3317 18 | heavens! a natural death, pleurisy, or some~accidentmakes me 3318 16 | three doctors arrived. They plied~Calyste with questions; 3319 25 | ten days after the scheme plotted on the boulevard between 3320 20 | herself. These thoughts~plowed furrows in her heart. She 3321 7 | him; he has no author to pluck, no system to undermine, 3322 7 | canopy above it adorned with~plumes; the hangings of blue silk; 3323 8 | justly; for is it not the plummet line with which to sound 3324 25 | Don't try to throw a plummet-line into my waters, my boy; 3325 22 | presents and dainties and pocket-money~the child who called her 3326 18 | the maidens of~Ossian, so poetically painted by Girodet. Her 3327 24 | till~the duchess should ask point-blank for his co-operation before~ 3328 8 | These words were said pointedly. The admiration depicted 3329 10 | to the eyes than a~woman poised on a rock like a statue 3330 19 | weaned; my milk would have poisoned him."~ ~At that idea the 3331 18 | earnestly forbidden me to go. Poisonous flowers are all charming;~ 3332 2 | her hood and her hair to poke or scratch her~white locks. 3333 23 | interest in the cause~of Poland, in penitentiaries, in the 3334 14 | assaults~which have ended in polishing all ruggedness.~ ~You will 3335 25 | Arthur; he feels bound to~be polite, and he is probably looking 3336 8 | Vignon thinks himself a great politician as well as a great~writer; 3337 4 | and the baron, those wily politicians, had~found a means of eluding 3338 6 | like the outer petal of a pomegranate such as Phidias might have~ 3339 26 | roues/. For myself, I have pondered this question deeply;~and, 3340 7 | desert contains waste tracts, ponds of unequal size,~round the 3341 2 | of one of the noblest and poorest families of that unhappy~ 3342 5 | first with an~enemy to the Pope, and then with a musician, 3343 2 | the white arms look like poplar-wood.~These hands, hooked or 3344 1 | having, in 1820, planted poplars along the banks of the~moat 3345 9 | lily, beside the scarlet poppy; a~turquoise near a ruby. 3346 6 | sisters~of her convent. The populace of Nantes, during the last 3347 22 | The saying has become so popular that it must be allowed 3348 8 | silverware, the delicate porcelain, the~beautiful linen, the 3349 19 | try~to issue from all her pores. She was blind for a few 3350 1 | be seen the rings of the~portcullises; it is entered by a drawbridge 3351 19 | heard the closing of~the porte-cochere she started up like a frightened 3352 11 | Kergarouets related to the Portendueres, and to old Admiral~de Kergarouet, 3353 6 | sum to the family of the porter and~gardener, not less, 3354 18 | other before~the windows, portieres, in short all things within 3355 23 | person will be to paint a portion of the~youth of the day. 3356 13 | willowy, while I have a portly dignity; in~short, you are / 3357 18 | in Italy and in Spain and Portugal. Can any woman be~tender 3358 18 | composition.~ ~As for her pose, one word will sufficeit 3359 8 | playing a part with me; he is posing~as a man who is wretched 3360 10 | elder sister,~who refused positively to profit by what she called 3361 26 | Madame du Guenic without the possibility of return, and then she~ 3362 18 | tirewithout their knowledge,~possiblyof marriage with a nature like 3363 10 | in her own carriage with~post-horses, though, to be sure, the 3364 6 | existence. Letters came to the post-office, directed to Camille Maupin~ 3365 10 | though, to be sure, the post-road was not only longer,~but 3366 16 | left the~ ~garden by the postern-gate and fled to Les Touches, 3367 23 | their names on~the nation's posters for reasons more puerile. 3368 17 | them with money. The French postilion~is eminently intelligent, 3369 17 | waiting-maids. The four postilions~dressed in their finest 3370 4 | venomous of all writers,so~the postmaster says, and he's a /juste-milieu/ 3371 5 | brow, and~she resolved to postpone the explanation till the 3372 14 | from early morning at their~posts, armed with long rakes. 3373 18 | encounter her~bodily? Ah! the postulant of the Visitation was right, 3374 23 | mattings and adorned with~potteries, through which to reach 3375 1 | pitchers of gray and blue~pottery, bearing arabesque designs 3376 5 | property, two or~three thousand pounds sterling, from an aunt. 3377 11 | true Irish lady to make and~pour out tea (that mighty affair 3378 17 | shone~radiant as the sun pouring in upon me, and scintillating 3379 2 | through his~wrinkles, showed a powerfully sanguine temperament, fitted 3380 22 | like Sabine du Guenic, by practising (as she may select) the 3381 4 | Vendee beside his~father, the praises that MADAME bestowed upon 3382 2 | but, excepting always his prayer-book, he had not~read three volumes 3383 2 | the causes of this unusual~pre-occupation, as blind persons, on whose 3384 4 | dishonors her land. I shall preach a sermon~upon her next Sunday."~ ~" 3385 2 | chase the rudiments of war, preaching by~example, indifferent 3386 18 | their power is solid or precarious, and~you'll understand how 3387 17 | was visible from excessive precaution.~ ~When I saw the towers 3388 10 | terrible declarations of the~preceding night. She seemed, however, 3389 14 | sudden gust of wind might precipitate~the rash gazer into the 3390 25 | Madame Schontz had given precise directions; monsieur could 3391 8 | imposing, in spite of the~precocious deteriorations of a face 3392 5 | that is the secret of their~predilection for feeble, deformed, or 3393 6 | problem to be solved in the predominance~of dark hair, brown eyes, 3394 8 | thickening;~leaden tones predominate in the complexion, giving 3395 22 | cannot be questioned by the prefect of the Seine, nor by those 3396 20 | It is~life. And that is preferable, with its wounds and its 3397 18 | until~the time when her pregnancy gave additional guarantees 3398 6 | Catholic, archaic, and full of prejudice, the singular~life of this 3399 25 | little Bourse, a~sort of prelude to the great one. He seemed 3400 23 | Heir" by reason~of certain premeditated prodigalities. Du Ronceret 3401 25 | trim your sails; and the premium I want for thus saving you 3402 4 | Madame du~Guenic's evident preoccupation was the chief topic of conversation,~ 3403 18 | designs as~she secretly prepares those volcanic eruptions 3404 19 | must get out of it by a presentDear little~mother," he said 3405 23 | her to the point of never presenting himself~before her eyes 3406 19 | greatness of their efforts at~preservation. Therefore to struggle successfully 3407 23 | some sort of floral society presided~over by the Duc de Vissembourg, 3408 23 | create fictitious~dignities, presidents, vice-presidents, and secretaries 3409 17 | cling to it, as a mother~presses her infant to her breast, 3410 13 | of her eye.~ ~Under the pressure of that thought a horrible 3411 18 | deep sensation of a double~pressurefull of seductive tingling.~ ~" 3412 24 | interview~with the duchess, his prestige with Madame Schontz, and 3413 25 | lauded the graceful and presuming young~man so highly to Beatrix 3414 7 | jealous, or, rather, he pretends jealousy, and you are young, 3415 18 | and again under various pretexts. At last my~mother-in-law 3416 6 | faculties of~a woman and prevents her from judging soberly.~ ~ 3417 2 | Chouan, had, some years previously, a return~of his own youth 3418 15 | execution, the famous "/Pria che spunti~l'aurora/," which 3419 26 | thanking them for having pricked his illusions.~ ~Three days 3420 15 | youngest and handsomest of our prima-~donnas, Mademoiselle Falcon 3421 14 | other great spectacles of primeval Nature. Perhaps the rocks 3422 18 | see over there with~the Princesse de Cadignan; it relates 3423 1 | out in the~centre of the principal mass the Hand bearing the 3424 25 | two rivals in their own principality, the one orb on its decline,~ 3425 2 | by a little~hood of brown printed cotton, quilted like a petticoat, 3426 15 | and the woman strive for priority of action, so deep is the 3427 18 | breakfast. He~escaped as prisoners escape, happy in being afoot, 3428 16 | Your son is ill," he said privately to the baroness, on the 3429 9 | certainly carry~off the prize from a woman of forty."~ ~ 3430 23 | passions there is none more prized~than that of a Madame Schontz, 3431 4 | wins a trick he is paid /pro rata/ to the stake;~that 3432 4 | head-splitters, algebraic problems, and~intolerably difficult 3433 23 | had reached this stage of proceeding,~when Madame de Grandlieu 3434 1 | government is slow in its~proceedings; and next, the inhabitants 3435 23 | charity or true~beneficence proceeds; /they/ study evils in wounds 3436 14 | whence they watched the process~of this natural chemistry, 3437 23 | worst of all situations. By~proclaiming the equality of all, she 3438 22 | Montyon."~ ~By dint of being prodded, the marquis was brought 3439 23 | of certain premeditated prodigalities. Du Ronceret had profited 3440 19 | however excessive, can prodigally spend,~or life would be 3441 1 | well as faith in God, did prodigies.~ ~As for the arrangement 3442 6 | need to be in our day. Her prodigious reading~controlled her passions 3443 10 | bored her four daughters prodigiously by dragging~them on the 3444 18 | of the young~household by producing a series of excitements 3445 6 | promiseshidden, perhaps, from the~profanethe calm of that countenance 3446 7 | I am not the dupe of his professed~desire to go to Croisic 3447 10 | other. Between two such professional duellists the combat~cannot 3448 24 | moral specialties, sciences, professions; the strongest and~most 3449 8 | dishevelled pathos that any German professor of philosophy ever~spluttered 3450 17 | you in offering you the~profits which time has brought to 3451 19 | advances one step more~into profligacy, the only word which properly 3452 7 | like the cry of a soul /de profundis/ to God~from the depths 3453 25 | say on the stage, as the~progenitrix of honest men."~ ~ ~"It 3454 24 | marquis, communicated her project to Monsieur de Trailles, 3455 14 | in the shade of a granite projection, and was lost in~thought. 3456 12 | pretty roads selected as promenades on /fete/~days, accompanied 3457 6 | yet, in spite of all these promiseshidden, perhaps, from the~profanethe 3458 14 | Calyste.~ ~"All men begin by promising that," she answered, "and 3459 14 | pledges of themselves in the promissory notes~which they offer on 3460 6 | monuments, and whose fame is promoted~by its rarity,for in twenty 3461 12 | his father as a means of promoting her marriage.~Calyste wandered 3462 13 | Beatrix heard only the promptings~of worldly wisdom; she feared 3463 23 | equality of all, she has promulgated a declaration of~the rights 3464 14 | consonants being as difficult to pronounce as to~remember.~ ~Calyste 3465 14 | have now~reached the only propitious place to say these things, 3466 10 | conveyed to~me your friendly proposal, but we fearmy sister, my 3467 26 | carried certain~amicable proposals from her husband, took me 3468 13 | beauty of a sphinx, but don't propound conundrums. Speak out, plainly,~ 3469 26 | prompted by respect for the~proprieties, also by that desire for 3470 18 | which was ill-kept by the~proprietor. Calyste awaited Beatrix 3471 6 | as to dress, hypocritical~propriety, and the hunting graces 3472 6 | from the sculptor~to the prose-writer. Her heart is noble, endowed 3473 15 | willing to abandon a man in prosperity, would~sacrifice all to 3474 22 | has an income, her budget prospers; but if~she approaches the 3475 21 | impurity and all the tricks of prostitutes!~And Calyste is the dupe 3476 18 | odious~rival! But this is prostitution! I am not myself; I am ashamed 3477 14 | weakness, in fact the complete prostration, of the marquise~obliged 3478 16 | wife~of my best friend, my protector, my chiefbut we loved each 3479 16 | protected her as a shepherd protects the most precious of his~ 3480 1 | which your~sense of fitness protests; but nothing is so rare 3481 14 | extent. You~have made me the proudest and happiest of my sex, 3482 26 | better ignore all mistaken provocations. Between ourselves, I am~ 3483 18 | said Beatrix, playing a provocative~amazement. "My poor food 3484 8 | think,~rode his horse at the Provost of Paris for a wrong of 3485 11 | sister-in-law, who acted as the proxy of her eyes.~ ~The party 3486 25 | replied Madame Schontz, with a~prudish little air. "Now that we 3487 Note| admitted at the time of~publication. Mademoiselle des Touches ( 3488 6 | success~obtained by her first publicationnow, perhaps, too much forgotten.~ 3489 6 | pseudonym, and his~first publications were those of an adorer 3490 6 | and scientific men, and publicists,a society~toward which her 3491 23 | posters for reasons more puerile. Distinction is sought~at 3492 18 | with a second sleeve of~puffed tulle, divided by straps 3493 18 | scarcely~visible within the puffings of her very large sleeves. 3494 14 | shoulders, and you must pull them up."~ ~"And you?" said 3495 6 | constant nourishment of the pulp, so~to speak, of that polished 3496 18 | steps of which were well pumiced and~the landings filled 3497 9 | raised the tapestry portiere,"punctual as a~king."~ ~"You recognized 3498 2 | Croisic on fast-days, to purchase a fish to be had for~less 3499 1 | paludiers/) by the necessity of purchasing the jewels distinctive of~ 3500 18 | brought up~than Calyste, of purer morals, less stained by 3501 13 | No? Well, then, he has purified me."~ ~Camille cast on Beatrix 3502 25 | he is very ugly with his purple skin and bristles for whiskers;~


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