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3503 25 | by three bunches grapes purpure, leaved~vert, one and two;
3504 16 | old maids and the rector, pursuing~their scheme, had kept Charlotte
3505 17 | money~lasts. A moralist is puzzled to decide on which side
3506 22 | sexagenary retired shopkeeper, quadruple millionnaire or~moderate-income
3507 5 | of the lamp beneath~the quadruply centennial hangings of that
3508 14 | stupid pleasures of vanity, quaff at a single draught?~She
3509 10 | consequence of those two~qualitiesthey fatigue."~ ~"What a sentence!"
3510 26 | man on whom her rank and quality did~not impose, who, as
3511 8 | is condemned to~love him /quand meme/."~ ~"Poor woman!"
3512 8 | accompanies her."~ ~"Have they quarrelled?"~ ~"No."~ ~"Play me a sonata
3513 8 | now to that~privilege of quarrelling in jest to which so many
3514 1 | modern industry are freestone~quarries, saltpetre mines, cotton
3515 17 | barrier of Passy by the quay of the Pont d'Iena,~and
3516 4 | replied the rector,"a woman of questionable~morals, a writer for the
3517 10 | magpies. The old maid was~questioning Gasselin as to what had
3518 14 | satisfy all longings,~all questionings, all hopes. She cast her
3519 3 | but in fact she~was not quick-witted; on the other hand, being
3520 10 | tranquillity of her look, and her quiet manner,~put him at his ease,
3521 1 | there silently, to~taste the quietude which reigns beneath the
3522 16 | who broke the fever with~quinine and reduced it in a few
3523 10 | have not the courage to quit it," he went on, after a
3524 19 | to marquises~in a voice quivering with tears which were furtively
3525 18 | term of the /Je ne sais quoi/. Everybody knows in what
3526 22 | Schontz made Arthur sell his~race-horses, through a series of considerations
3527 13 | her."~ ~While Calyste was racking his brains to imagine what
3528 6 | infinite, just as the external radiance of the eyes suggests the~
3529 26 | case, your~letters have a radical fault, a nullity, as the
3530 13 | indifference has something so radically cold about it that it can~
3531 8 | strongly~resembled the divine Raffaelle. But his nose, that feature
3532 1 | which is~varied for each rafter; the space between them
3533 1 | The ceiling has projecting rafters enriched with foliage which
3534 7 | to that charming Parisian raillery, that graceful~satire which
3535 26 | lives which have left the rails along which the great social~
3536 23 | to reach the kiosk if it rained. When the~Heir was complimented
3537 8 | a gutter and not know~it rains, like those lovers seen
3538 2 | shoes. When it was cold or rainy he put on a goat's-skin,
3539 7 | pass (dressed in white) to rake up and gather~the salt into /
3540 14 | their~posts, armed with long rakes. Some were leaning on the
3541 26 | crowded by fashionable~women ranged on the stairs or standing
3542 8 | journalist, he~came from the ranks of the bourgeoisie, to which
3543 4 | a trick he is paid /pro rata/ to the stake;~that is,
3544 24 | Maxime was, in the eyes of /rats/ and~courtesans, an extremely
3545 6 | should live to resist the ravages of time will~understand
3546 14 | to him when she saw him re-appear~so weakly.~ ~During his
3547 22 | sprouting of the~precious germs, re-cultivated for him.~ ~Thus Aurelie
3548 2 | driven out as miraculously~re-established, were to him a source of
3549 8 | started on that theme, Gennaro reaches the most~dishevelled pathos
3550 14 | several scattered rocks, just reaching the surface at high water,
3551 8 | falls~into excesses with the readiness of a courtesan, his powers
3552 23 | Norman, who wanted his~luxury ready-made, bought Couture's furniture
3553 25 | You make me very proud; it realizes the fable of the Rat and
3554 16 | received a fatal shock on realizing the change now so~visible
3555 20 | nursing of her first~child she reappears in the world embellished
3556 14 | Gasselin brought up the rear.~ ~"There are my father
3557 9 | gules and sable, a horse~rearing argent, shod with gold.
3558 18 | anything to~fear? Add to this reasoning of Mrs. Blue-Beard the desire
3559 18 | Sabine. Nothing else could~reassure her, she said, in the dreadful
3560 18 | there in love? Does Nature rebel against the social yoke?
3561 6 | indignant, or angry, or rebellious.~There, above all, as Talma
3562 18 | assume a~virgin air, and recall by clouds of white material
3563 16 | listened to the sound of his receding steps with anxiety.~ ~"Something
3564 6 | reached the rector.~The receiver of taxes, the /juge de paix/,
3565 8 | himself as an artist who~receives his inspirations from heaven;
3566 25 | Chartres, who took for his reception an evening when Calyste~
3567 2 | penetrating to the inmost recesses of their~hearts could not
3568 17 | me that the /gars/ have reckoned up the revenues and estimated
3569 9 | soft half-light he saw, reclining on a~divan, as if a sculptor
3570 25 | own vanity was however a recognition of inferiority which~wounded
3571 19 | the stage~at which a woman recognizes so delicate a distinction.~ ~
3572 20 | Seeing Sabine's sentence and~recognizing her handwriting he flung
3573 4 | a past that was rich in recollections.~ ~"So the old Duc de Lenoncourt
3574 2 | go~to Paris and claim his recompense from the triumphant Bourbons,
3575 7 | youthful soul the best~of recompenses. "You are distracted! Where
3576 25 | promptly. "It is~impossible to reconcile her with Rochefide as long
3577 26 | following condition. You must be reconciled to Monsieur de~Rochefide;
3578 8 | years of the Restoration to reconstruct itself, was about to~go
3579 22 | Nathan to Florine, after recounting her~fortune and her success, "
3580 2 | which no Guenic had proved recreant: /Fac!/~ ~His forehead attracted
3581 21 | dear director, now you have rectified the only bad thing I had~
3582 4 | Mistigris was so great to the rectoras it was~to the other playersthat
3583 3 | like that of many poor rectors whose~existence or whose
3584 5 | dangerous for young souls by the rectorwould have upon her~only child,
3585 18 | melancholy bits~of wisdom often recur to me. She is happy in being
3586 3 | the whitest teeth in the~reddest of gums,a fact reassuring
3587 23 | half worn-out, did not redeem the unpleasant~sonority
3588 8 | carriage and manner, which redeems all such defects~and sets
3589 18 | that of devils) Beatrix~was redolent of the perfume which she
3590 18 | which Calyste's~love would reduce her. Then she affected to
3591 2 | of that autumn coloring, redundant in flowers and fruit, refreshed
3592 1 | passes through a sort of reed of~brass, drawing the nut-oil
3593 9 | this, which proves a fatal reef~to vulgar women.~ ~The expression
3594 12 | and that remark does not refer to~her; but I make it to
3595 10 | through an hour without reference to Nantes,~matters of social
3596 2 | her eyes, of a delicate, refined~beauty, blessed with a skin
3597 6 | convoluted,a sign of secret refinement. The bust is~large, the
3598 22 | mind which we must call a~reflector, he appropriated the sallies
3599 25 | diagnose.~In one, it is a last reflexion of the ray divine that is
3600 1 | to command the flux and reflux of the tides and the dunes,
3601 16 | enters my lungs does not refresh me; the sun feels~cold;
3602 2 | redundant in flowers and fruit, refreshed and~refreshing with the
3603 18 | and~there she had taken refuge in a "little house" formerly
3604 15 | added Conti, to prevent all~refusal on the part of Calyste.~ ~
3605 7 | repeated and inexplicable refusals of Felicite. This sentiment,
3606 10 | paying no attention to~them; refusing what she desired in order
3607 3 | words, /Domine, salvum fac regem/.~Politics were still at
3608 6 | belongs the ambassador of the Regent, even more famous to-day~
3609 26 | Arthur for the last~week to a regimen of kicks on the shin and
3610 2 | food was subjected to~the regularity of times and seasons, this
3611 14 | unpardonable love, and social~rehabilitation. She began, therefore, to
3612 8 | work, a grand opera, into rehearsal at once. You will understand,~
3613 10 | a few days and you will reignbeloved by more than~one."~ ~"Loved!"
3614 1 | taste the quietude which reigns beneath the well-preserved
3615 4 | five~sous, on condition of reimbursement in case they won. An old
3616 22 | her house)~invested and reinvested for her. But she manipulated
3617 10 | you never will be after~rejecting the beautiful fruit which
3618 18 | had long been in bed he rejoiced~to find himself rich in
3619 11 | any moment to Paris and rejoining Conti; and what will you
3620 20 | phase~of maternity, while it rejuvenates the women of a certain age,
3621 6 | not reassured the~abbe by relating to him the strange and fantastic
3622 2 | economy,~which was never relaxed except for some great occasion,
3623 15 | Camille's horses to the first~relay. The morning twilight enabled
3624 10 | replied the young man, releasing himself with cruel haste~
3625 18 | at once to his succor to relieve his embarrassment.~ ~"Well,
3626 14 | have placed the~Woman. She relished with delight the respectful
3627 4 | company~but not without reluctanceadopted it. But it proved impossible
3628 2 | old men whom Van Ostade, Rembrandt,~Mieris, and Gerard Dow
3629 4 | other name, as I have just rememberedif~she wanted to keep him with
3630 20 | beneath the gown.~ ~"He remembers,he, at any rate," she said
3631 18 | stormy emotions I revived by reminding~him of the coquetries of
3632 18 | was increasing through his reminiscences; that he~was expending on /
3633 6 | the corpse of France. Her removal to~Paris was therefore still
3634 18 | began to laugh, as it to remove the melancholy impression
3635 24 | Orosmanes, or Saint-Preux, Rene, Werther, and other lovers
3636 19 | to~be vanquished is the renewal of the triumph of the first
3637 6 | she increased one-third on renewing the~leases); and a capital
3638 6 | are~summoned by Nature to renounce all love.~ ~Meantime, a
3639 26 | hotel de Rochefide is to be renovated, and the~marquise intends
3640 7 | spirit, its desires for renovation in~all directions, and its
3641 6 | house to artists, authors~of renown, learned and scientific
3642 3 | thousand francs a year~from the rental of lands. She had come into
3643 17 | revenues and estimated the~rentals with a veracity and justice
3644 2 | Mademoiselle du Guenic received the rents and~sent them to her brother
3645 18 | alternative of an utter renunciation of Sabine. Nothing else
3646 19 | her~symptoms the means of repairing the ill, while he ordered
3647 23 | did not know how else to repay him. Men have a~natural
3648 6 | the only nature capable of~repelling the action of time. The
3649 10 | most~imperious look in her repertory. A smile, which the marquise
3650 10 | the baron; "for we cannot replace him."~ ~The words made the
3651 23 | great vice of the social replastering of 1830. He meant~to turn
3652 25 | of to-day in the market reports, /dull/."~ ~"I will undertake
3653 5 | Her morals are very reprehensible, and she has taken a man'
3654 6 | plays,~not intended for representation on the stage, written after
3655 26 | inconsolable man for the representative of a~family in need of consolation.~ ~"
3656 24 | now in~possession of fame, represented love! Never did their frosty-hearted~
3657 8 | from his real heart. He represents himself as an artist who~
3658 13 | it heroism on her~part to repress the /capriccio/, as the
3659 5 | child; go to bed," she said, repressing her~tears.~ ~A mother who
3660 9 | and then to give him a few repressive glances, which fell~upon
3661 13 | especially after~certain little reproaches which I mean to make to
3662 14 | sacrifice'!" she said, in~reproachful tones, which made poor Calyste
3663 26 | why you are blaming and reproaching me; I~saw him!"~ ~"You saw
3664 10 | herself in the company of that reprobate~woman!"~ ~"Oh, aunt, a woman
3665 13 | cutting insults that we do not reproduce~it here. Beatrix, irritated
3666 16 | chevalier.~ ~Charlotte looked reprovingly at Monsieur du Halga, whom
3667 2 | guerilla warfare with the Republic, his exile, the perils of~
3668 1 | Yes, the most confirmed republican~would be moved by the fidelity,
3669 17 | books, which I am soon to repudiate solemnlyyou have cast~her,
3670 21 | Calyste. My conscience is repugnant to the use of such~means,
3671 10 | not active.~Your strength repulses men of strength who fear
3672 14 | Guenic felt the most violent~repulsion at the appearance of Beatrix,
3673 23 | politics; it now seems that reputations won by~toil, by services
3674 14 | We have no~more right to require different characters to
3675 4 | baron and the chevalier were~required to have won; otherwise the
3676 18 | altogether conformed to the legal requirements of the social~system.~ ~
3677 5 | children small~and still requiring protection. Perhaps that
3678 13 | of thoughts born of~these researches during a night-time of painful
3679 12 | to me~at first, I should resent the change; it would abase
3680 14 | who loved most~deeply and reservedly were, for a time at least,
3681 6 | whom~she had intended to reside. The Grandlieus followed
3682 16 | Pen-Hoel told her that she must resign herself to the death of
3683 23 | native town of Alencon,~resigning his judgeship (a position
3684 10 | still kept her arms crossed~resolutely, and he cast moist glances
3685 6 | solitude she set to work resolvedly, under the direction of
3686 23 | ambitions, the meanest of which resolves~to lead. She had, so democrats
3687 3 | implements that were also resonant.~Instead of Mademoiselle
3688 5 | that moment Calyste's step resounded in the lane. The poor mother,~
3689 3 | the rector's foot on the resounding steps of~the portico. He
3690 17 | noble, dignified, and self-~respecting in order to obtain from
3691 17 | conjugal love-speech which responded to the feelings~in my soul,
3692 24 | du Guenic, d'Ajuda, de Restaud, de~Rastignac, de Vandenesse.
3693 20 | unhappy girl,~instead of resting securely in her happiness.
3694 14 | full of mystery to anxious,~restless minds that they can burrow
3695 18 | Calyste, worried by my restlessness, agrees to take me. Either
3696 1 | those planks~were placed or restored in the reign of Louis XI.
3697 7 | Calyste, with difficulty restraining his tears, one of which~
3698 13 | behave like a man; nothing restrains you; if you haven't all~
3699 8 | and she suffered from the restraints imposed upon her; she escaped
3700 11 | girlish timidity. My~soul rests in his heart away from all
3701 3 | little gold to pay for the results of a love-~affair, but if
3702 14 | with him to Ireland, she resumed her dignified and~distant
3703 19 | Beatrix made Calyste swear and~reswear hatred to the wife, who,
3704 2 | return of the baron. This retainer~considered himself as part
3705 25 | into her heart by pretended reticences~which stirred the fibres
3706 6 | which~gathers itself up and retires with as much rapidity as
3707 25 | for respectful summons," retorted Aurelie,~insolently. "But
3708 9 | the old people turned to retrace their steps and Calyste
3709 1 | much in the phenomena of~retrospection; but the monuments of modern
3710 21 | day the bitterness of a retrospective adultery!"~ ~The next day,
3711 1 | staff is like a~signature revealing Venice, chivalry, and the
3712 21 | making a sort of~moral revelation, so distraught was she by
3713 5 | pastor,~who, out of true reverence for the family, had promised
3714 8 | Calyste, waking from his reverie, "who has~been twice under
3715 22 | border-land between misery and its~reverse. This person was not really
3716 6 | des Touches this order was~reversed. Her youth was wrapped in
3717 6 | Mademoiselle des Touches did not revisit Les Touches for~two years,
3718 8 | made by Charles X., but revoked by the revolution~of July.
3719 11 | into madness. He began to revolve in his mind~some decided
3720 2 | whose care she lived, had rewarded the chaste girlhood and
3721 24 | and your protection are rewards which would make me commit
3722 12 | letters begun, rejected, and rewritten.~ ~Here is the one that
3723 2 | floated in the cathedral of~Rheims; hands that were often bloody
3724 18 | might be called, in woman's rhetoric,~an antithesis of action.~ ~"
3725 25 | afternoon, to dry out their rheumatic~affections. He had excellent
3726 3 | who wore flannel for his~rheumatism, a black-silk skull-cap
3727 2 | consisted of~stout shoes, ribbed stockings, breeches of greenish
3728 12 | day, "Senza brama sicura ricchezza,"~seems as if made for her.
3729 10 | softened by the shadow of a rice-~straw hat, on which were
3730 3 | Odessa, near the Duc de~Richelieu, with whom he returned to
3731 6 | Nature's palette, and the richest setting.~ ~Brittany presents
3732 25 | an usher.~But if you get rid of Arthur and marry du Ronceret,
3733 10 | unusual a sight. Calyste had ridden on to announce the arrival
3734 6 | aunt and her cousins, who ridiculed her~studies and teased her
3735 9 | herself imposing without being ridiculously so. Women of~the great world
3736 5 | has given up hunting~ ~and riding."~ ~"Her morals are very
3737 7 | riding-whip, a hammock, a rifle, a man's blouse, tobacco,
3738 25 | Monsieur du Guenic~to the right-about. It will be a triumph! You'
3739 2 | solemnity of the~lines, the rigidity of the nose, the form of
3740 2 | household, which~she managed rigorously on a system of almost inconceivable
3741 18 | that of a rock; she rose to ring the bell,~laying a finger
3742 2 | deformed. Her~hair was worn in /ringlets/, after the English fashion,
3743 6 | imaginations of young girls run riot. A brain crammed~with knowledge
3744 16 | her /louis/ that she~now ripped them out with the rapidity
3745 2 | light of heaven seems to ripple in their silken~spirals
3746 8 | saw his courage~tested; he risked the life he loved; and yet,
3747 16 | love," said the chevalier, risking that opinion very~timidly.~ ~"
3748 22 | from the twelve others. Her rivalsSuzanne~Gaillard, who, in 1838,
3749 6 | nor throw men into the river as the heroine of the~Tour
3750 18 | was loved by a species~of Rizzio, whom no engagement trammelled,
3751 7 | beyond the furze of the roadside and the distorted heads
3752 14 | produced by the gorse along the~roadway, the golden blooms of which
3753 5 | impieties that actors repeat, to roam about the world, first with
3754 21 | actions"~ ~"You don't mean to rob anybody?"~ ~"On the contrary,
3755 12 | which you complain. A second robbery~from Camille would be a
3756 8 | Mieris, in~which was a woman robed in white satin, standing
3757 17 | child. I have washed my robes in the tears of~repentance;
3758 26 | her carriage.~Doves can be Robespierres in spite of their white
3759 13 | misfortune of being healthy~and robust, and of loving our friends
3760 Note| transition period of the~/vieille roche/ as it passed into the customs
3761 22 | Trailles, d'Esgrignon, La Roche-Hugon, Ronqueroles, Laginski,~
3762 18 | enough to mention Madame de~Rochefide-whom in my heart I called la
3763 2 | Charette, with Cathelineau, La Rochejaquelein, d'Elbee, Bonchamps, and~
3764 18 | in my heart I called la Rocheperfide. At last we~went to see
3765 21 | sorrow is like~that iron rod that sculptors put within
3766 9 | to be seen with charming roguishness. A gown of~white muslin,
3767 1 | this race, equal to the Rohans without having~deigned to
3768 11 | hours a day in reading their~romances."~ ~"So then you know" began
3769 1 | the Trojans were to the Romans. The Guaisqlains (the name~
3770 10 | built and furnished with~romantic hopes, a heap of ruins.
3771 6 | of the classics and the~romanticists palpitated on all sides,
3772 9 | last~duet of Zingarelli's "Romeo e Giulietta," one of the
3773 22 | Esgrignon, La Roche-Hugon, Ronqueroles, Laginski,~Lenoncourt, found
3774 1 | bell-turret, instead of being~roofed, like the sister-tower,
3775 7 | Batz and rippled on the~roofs of Croisic with pitiless
3776 18 | curiosity of~Eve. What a root of bitterness Mademoiselle
3777 23 | visits to Paris, tried his rope, like an acrobat, and had~
3778 7 | caught back with silken ropes, and a carpet of Savonnerie;~
3779 14 | hardy little plants with rose-~colored flowers that grew
3780 20 | her heart, turn sour and rot the delicate~roots from
3781 8 | silken ladders for~me, no rotten trellises to cling to and
3782 14 | sheltered by great portals; roughly~carved, it is true, but
3783 15 | to let Conti ride over me roughshod; and yet I can't~defend
3784 16 | The chevalier drew the /rouleaux/ from his pocket and showed
3785 25 | Her neck, of exquisite roundness, was beginning to~take on
3786 25 | libertinism which~Jean-Jacques Rousseau was the first to have the
3787 3 | qualities in a region of routine like Brittany were, practically,
3788 14 | telling the boatman to row to the landing-place that
3789 26 | what success Aurelie was rowing~her boat.~ ~"My dear," said
3790 24 | Paris there are as many royalties as there are varieties of
3791 17 | deeply loved, Lucien de Rubempre, while, at~the same time,
3792 9 | poppy; a~turquoise near a ruby. In a moment, as it were,
3793 2 | petticoat, trimmed with a~cotton ruche, and tied beneath the chin
3794 11 | epigrammatic, and~almost rude to Calyste, whom Felicite
3795 2 | pleasures of the chase the rudiments of war, preaching by~example,
3796 8 | other hand, issuing from its ruffle of lace, fell~white and
3797 3 | record, wrinkled as a lake ruffled by the~wind, with gray eyes,
3798 8 | those wadded sleeves with ruffles, from~which the hand comes
3799 13 | soothing southerly breeze was ruffling the surface~of the salt
3800 14 | have ended in polishing all ruggedness.~ ~You will find under a
3801 1 | of France, once elected ruler. To-day the~name of du Guaisnic,
3802 5 | inflexible and semi-conventual rules which regulated the hours
3803 17 | acted as~courier, and in the rumble were two waiting-maids.
3804 14 | the point of rocks that~runs farthest into the sea. On
3805 11 | which proved that Camille's ruse had answered its purpose.~ ~"
3806 3 | him by the gleam of his rush-light,~which was burned at the
3807 23 | he~smoked, a gallery in rustic wood, with India mattings
3808 25 | clever Charles-Edouard, Comte Rusticoli de la~Palferine. Until this
3809 18 | superior impertinence.~ ~The rustle of a silk dress announced
3810 22 | architectural steppes~where the wind rustles innumerable papers on which
3811 3 | your granaries with~wheat, rye, and flax, and waiting for
3812 19 | the birth of their crow's-feet, they know themselves by~
3813 2 | or rainy he put on a goat's-skin, after the~fashion of his
3814 17 | and he called me my dear Sabineand~asked him plainly to tell
3815 9 | fessed azure, gules and sable, a horse~rearing argent,
3816 2 | and received the cut of a sabre on his~shoulder; but so
3817 1 | commodities for~barter in sacks. They are induced to do
3818 16 | rector~administered the last sacraments to the old Breton warrior.
3819 17 | me. But I do not write to sadden you,only to entreat you
3820 5 | aside paternal anxiety, saddened Fanny for a~moment. The
3821 7 | uplifts the mind although~it saddens it; an effect produced at
3822 23 | suit me, I am certain of saddling that one. My~future can
3823 8 | Calyste, folding the letter sadly.~ ~That sadness flowed to
3824 11 | the miseries of women, has saidnever lie," she continued. "One~
3825 16 | when, as seamen say, they sailed in company along the mall.~ ~"
3826 25 | you know how~to trim your sails; and the premium I want
3827 22 | herself~under the patronage of Saint-Aurelie.~ ~Lively, witty, and well-educated,
3828 17 | have entered the order of Saint-Francois de~Sales solely because
3829 22 | de Rochefide, rue d'Anjou Saint-Honore, and of two~hundred thousand
3830 24 | younger brother,~Orosmanes, or Saint-Preux, Rene, Werther, and other
3831 18 | by the~term of the /Je ne sais quoi/. Everybody knows in
3832 2 | loves God,for~their own sakes. And so one might fancy
3833 22 | they had better give no salary than send them~eighty francs
3834 7 | mulons/; a space which the saline exhalations prevent~all
3835 22 | reflector, he appropriated the sallies of others, the wit of the
3836 8 | impossible.~ ~"There's a salmon-trout for dinner, Monsieur Calyste,
3837 7 | rocks and the dunes and the salt-~marshes without me. He meant
3838 14 | curiosity among the~female salt-carriers; and as much to avoid their
3839 1 | embossed soup-tureen, and two salt-cellars, all of~silver; also many
3840 7 | salt crust, along~which the salt-makers pass (dressed in white)
3841 1 | pretty town~overlooks a salt-marsh, the product of which is
3842 1 | are freestone~quarries, saltpetre mines, cotton factories.
3843 19 | face and making her~smell salts.~ ~"Fetch the doctor and
3844 1 | have crumbled~under the salty vapors of the atmosphere.
3845 9 | marquise, who returned the salutation with an~inclination of her
3846 15 | exchanging the coldest of salutations with his~rival. He was torn
3847 3 | crucial words, /Domine, salvum fac regem/.~Politics were
3848 7 | of Art, on the~other the sameness of uncivilized Brittany.
3849 12 | once embraced,you are like Samson, you will perish by~holding
3850 8 | the~Fenice, and now at the San Carlo. Three Italian operas
3851 6 | woman; it~recognized and sanctioned her independence; women
3852 8 | and my pardon lies in the sanctity of my~love. Between social
3853 17 | covered with carving as a sandal-wood box. In spite~of the affectionate
3854 2 | wrinkles, showed a powerfully sanguine temperament, fitted to resist~
3855 1 | of the Byzantine and the Saracenic. It is~crowned with a circular
3856 9 | Dunque il mio bene tu mia sarai/, the last~duet of Zingarelli'
3857 14 | fortress occupied the spot. The sardine-fishers have given the rock,~which
3858 1 | of their butter and their sardines. It is connected with~the
3859 14 | strange reefs, nor those of Sardinia, where Nature is~dedicated
3860 8 | interrupting Calyste with a sardonic air.~ ~"But, monsieur,"
3861 Add | Princess~A Daughter of Eve~Sarrasine~A Prince of Bohemia~ ~Ronceret,
3862 14 | woollen stuff, and a blue sash with floating ends gave
3863 10 | on in her tilt with the satirical Parisians.~ ~Calyste, who
3864 8 | Ha!" said Claude Vignon, satirically, "a slight touch of jealousy,~
3865 22 | country, not~for the paltry satisfactions of a betting man. If you
3866 22 | to upset so~agreeable and satisfactory an existence. This opinion
3867 23 | Envy. We inherit to-day the saturnalias of the~Revolution transferred
3868 11 | took a path, along which he sauntered as though he~were meeting
3869 2 | about the baron, a certain savagery, a stolid~calm which resembled
3870 7 | which spreads its broad savanna~beyond the park, the last
3871 Add | Hannequin, Leopold~Albert Savarus~Cousin Betty~Cousin Pons~ ~
3872 18 | pardon of God."~ ~"But they saved the soul of that noble woman,
3873 18 | played before our eyes the Saviour's part toward the woman~
3874 26 | wished to give proof of his /savoir-faire/ by making~him a witness
3875 7 | silken ropes, and a carpet of Savonnerie;~in short, we find here
3876 5 | her."~ ~This speech has no savor at the present moment. But
3877 2 | like his sword~from its scabbard, holding it aloft in his
3878 8 | magnificent triumph at the Scala and the~Fenice, and now
3879 24 | darting fire, ongle gules, and scaled vert, a~chief ermine, from
3880 8 | climb in by a window."~ ~"Scaling a window is a badge of honor
3881 25 | particular grace of a true scamp.~ ~"There's none but you
3882 14 | her eyes moist with the scanty tears shed by~that class
3883 25 | Go and find your great scarecrow of a wife!"~ ~"My wife!"
3884 3 | in visible letters on his scarred face. To see~him now no
3885 7 | head-board surmounted by~Cupids scattering flowers, and the canopy
3886 Add | Savinien de~The Ball at Sceaux~Scenes from a Courtesan'
3887 2 | that she must yield the sceptre~of the household and abdicate
3888 20 | various little vaudeville schemes to~ascertain the dishes
3889 17 | not advising any odious~scheming, or petty tyranny; this
3890 6 | ways the living image of Schiller's Isis, seated in~the darkness
3891 22 | thus going through all the schools in which experience is~taught,
3892 6 | authors~of renown, learned and scientific men, and publicists,a society~
3893 6 | pair of eyes whose flame scintillates at times like that of a
3894 17 | pouring in upon me, and scintillating with a~million of flies,
3895 5 | cutting it with a~pair of old scissors, took up once more the worsted-work
3896 19 | like a flash, and~Sabine scolded herself for having made
3897 22 | women), allowed itself free scope in the~matter of brains.
3898 6 | guest was Claude Vignon, a scornful and powerful~writer who,
3899 2 | women who exist in England,~Scotland, or Ireland only. There
3900 23 | slaves, in all the little scoundrels above and below twelve years,
3901 21 | for Calyste. Ah! if I had scoured the world like /her/, if
3902 23 | realize, for he could scarcely scrape together eight thousand
3903 20 | poison, the choicest cookery scrapes~their throat like barley-bread,
3904 2 | and her hair to poke or scratch her~white locks. A stranger
3905 22 | Ninon II.), by vaunting her scrupulous~honesty, her excellent manners,
3906 8 | gift of~comprehension. He scrutinizes the thought of every one,
3907 5 | heard that~Mademoiselle Scudery and Madame de Sevigne wrote
3908 21 | like~that iron rod that sculptors put within the structure
3909 19 | forth like the waters~of sculptured nymphs from their inclining
3910 2 | ermined hand, as on his~scutcheon, shining with sincerity.
3911 1 | invalid going to~Croisic for sea-bathing (thought to have greater
3912 8 | pupils of her eyes are pale sea-green,~floating on their white
3913 18 | inferior or fallen natures the seal of their own~superiorityif
3914 26 | arrangement with the Keeper of the Seals. Fabien is to be~appointed
3915 16 | second~occasion, when, as seamen say, they sailed in company
3916 14 | basaltic~rocks of the northern seas can show a character so
3917 13 | tale; it is a drama of the~seashore."~ ~She went into her bedroom,
3918 Add | Arcis~ ~Cambremer, Pierre~A Seaside Tragedy~ ~Canalis, Constant-Cyr-Melchior,
3919 22 | served in the Royal Guard) seasoned conversation with so much
3920 22 | hold~her own against all second-class pianists. And, remark this!
3921 15 | comedy was judged to be a second-rate~actress. There was no reason
3922 24 | and d'Ajuda. The duchess, seconded by~the marquis, communicated
3923 18 | man~I really loved; and secondly, I am determined to belong
3924 8 | I shouldn't be alive two seconds. I have never said one~word
3925 23 | presidents, vice-presidents, and secretaries of societies,~the number
3926 7 | a carved ebony table, a secretary with many drawers,~inlaid
3927 2 | mattress, in which were secreted~double louis-d'ors), and
3928 26 | that outrage which~women secure of their rank in Olympus
3929 22 | patience~gave way; her beauty seduced her. When she reached her
3930 22 | existences either as father or seducer.~Madame Schontz had received
3931 22 | life had covered these good seeds with a coating of~salt,
3932 19 | you may as well reject all seekers after~knowledge, all delvers
3933 8 | deepest convictions.~He is a seer, a demon, a god, an angel.
3934 18 | they take a style, they~seize youth, they study the slightest
3935 18 | it all. A frantic desire seizes me sometimes to fly from
3936 22 | by practising (as she may select) the most~aggressive or
3937 15 | a gesture of~the utmost self-conceit"but the truth is, I have
3938 26 | strength, coquettish for self-glorification~only, a Madame d'Espard
3939 22 | by premature death often~self-inflicted, or by lucky marriages,
3940 5 | mother, family,~country, and self-interests. Sometimes she longed to
3941 20 | which a woman~loses her self-respect and dignity. These fatal
3942 17 | sanctifies. I love you~without self-seeking, as a mother loves her son,
3943 6 | animal is so complete, so self-sufficing, of a nature so~leonine,
3944 11 | not the pride, but the self-will, the obstinacy~which is
3945 2 | extent by the right of the selfish morals, the~uncertain aims,
3946 24 | naivete which disclosed what selfishness there is in~piety.~ ~"You
3947 12 | thirds of the estate. By selling a few farms, Mademoiselle
3948 21 | irreproachable and without the mere semblance of doing~wrong," replied
3949 22 | explain to you that this semi-bachelor had nothing~actually of
3950 14 | water, and~describing a semi-circle. It requires some nerve
3951 5 | bed.~The inflexible and semi-conventual rules which regulated the
3952 18 | those eyes, which in the semi-darkness~gathered the light and returned
3953 8 | In the first place the semi-dowagers, to~whom young men pay their
3954 1 | with~the East, where the semi-Saracenic architects, careless of
3955 17 | you of the wreck of that semi-virtue. Dignity, after~all, is
3956 1 | geometric~figures. The arch is semicircular. On it are carved the arms
3957 5 | the Latin and Greek of seminaries, the literature of~the dead
3958 5 | himself had received at the Seminary. The~baroness taught him
3959 10 | weaknesses, poesies, spiritual sensations,~devotions of moral fragrance,
3960 19 | the pretty~fooleries and senseless words which gay young mothers
3961 10 | madame, that I am very sensible to the form which you~give
3962 22 | therefore, as the duke had very~sensibly said to his wife, almost
3963 8 | could not comprehend this sensitiveness; but he has been~so happy
3964 24 | that Conti was merely a sentimental head-love in which~neither
3965 14 | wander in the~labyrinths of sentimentality and went straight to the
3966 14 | the~rocks.~ ~This gigantic sentinel resembles the look-out towers
3967 12 | interpreting to you the other day, "Senza brama sicura ricchezza,"~
3968 4 | ecarte, but only by order of sequence, so~that the first and second
3969 2 | all, her~open countenance, serene and slightly rosy, the purity
3970 2 | of Saint-Louis. A noble serenity now reigned upon that face
3971 4 | her land. I shall preach a sermon~upon her next Sunday."~ ~"
3972 26 | disillusionments.~ ~"Yes, in the serpent's tail," said Maxime, "or,
3973 9 | placed it there, a white and serpentine~shape which thrilled him.
3974 20 | arms of such women golden serpents with diamond heads, necklaces~
3975 25 | placed fretwise,~with /Servir/ for motto, and a squire'
3976 17 | and you will see that my servitude is established in spite
3977 17 | duke and~duchess as to the settlement of their five daughters:
3978 6 | less, in two years, than seventeen francs.~ ~After this, Mademoiselle
3979 2 | Breton was now a man of seventy-three; but his long-~continued
3980 23 | this amusing salon, were severally~suspected, and proved innocent.
3981 6 | magnificently the general severity of form. The forehead~is
3982 5 | Mademoiselle Scudery and Madame de Sevigne wrote books, but it was
3983 10 | through the window, as she sat sewing by~the light of the curiously
3984 22 | Marquis in the~forties, sexagenary retired shopkeeper, quadruple
3985 22 | morals put between the two sexes in the same~situation. That
3986 22 | furnished for her, rather~shabbily, an apartment costing twelve
3987 10 | jumped from the boat, of shabby leather~shoes, chosen for
3988 6 | Callipyge. There we may see~the shadowy line of demarcation which
3989 12 | I~could wish you doubly shamed if so my love might prove
3990 21 | which you receive. This~is shameful, but it is necessary. Look
3991 10 | produces his cap in~"Tristram Shandy."~ ~"You are a fortunate
3992 13 | far as to wish~herself a sharer in the sentiment, but she
3993 4 | Mademoiselle Zephirine, who went shares in the~game with the baroness,
3994 13 | without searching, the sharpest arrows in~her quiver. Camille
3995 3 | and complained about the~ ~sharpness of the wind or the heat
3996 2 | unwrinkle. The difficulty of shaving had obliged the old man
3997 26 | turned like Arthur to a sheep; I gave him Arthur's sofa.~
3998 1 | feudality, less its winding sheet of lava. It is afoot, but
3999 26 | What will you do when the shell bursts?"~ ~"A man has always
4000 14 | together,~searching for shells among those rocks, exchanging
4001 9 | where travellers can take shelter in storms of~wind or rain.
4002 14 | admiring the cool little covers sheltered by great portals; roughly~
|