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4003 1 | face each other; on their shelves, rubbed with Breton~persistency
4004 16 | and protected her as a shepherd protects the most precious
4005 19 | are ugly compared to many shepherds on the~Campagna of Rome,"
4006 1 | find~inescutcheoned in the shields of many of the old families.
4007 14 | carelessly open. Some wear~only shifts, and are the more dignified;
4008 1 | where it gilds the sands and shimmers on the~breast of Ocean?
4009 26 | regimen of kicks on the shin and perpetual wrangling
4010 23 | lemon-kid~gloves, embroidered shirt and frill, waistcoat more
4011 11 | played by Camille Maupin, as shocking as it was grand, is one
4012 9 | a horse~rearing argent, shod with gold. That beautiful
4013 7 | vanes of the two gables shooting up~beyond the furze of the
4014 22 | forties, sexagenary retired shopkeeper, quadruple millionnaire
4015 17 | whips, more noisy than the shots of a pistol~gallery. In
4016 25 | admirable adroitness of the showman who consented to superintend
4017 13 | them, the frankest as the shrewdest, are seldom able to keep
4018 25 | eye, Bixiou's wit, Finot's shrewdness, Maxime's profound~diplomacy,
4019 8 | dryly.~ ~"Oh," she cried, shrugging her shoulders, "I am aware
4020 14 | which Beatrix lay, and he shuddered. Her lips moved,she seemed
4021 19 | de Portenduere came, the shuddering chill of~reaction had succeeded
4022 16 | conscious at~times of little shudders at regular intervals, denoting
4023 20 | Rubini sang~/Il mio cor si divide/, she rushed away.
4024 17 | who find~themselves the sick-nurses, so to speak, of a husband'
4025 21 | fervor of love,killed it by sickening~me with all things. What
4026 21 | his distinction is mere sickliness. I have the misfortune to
4027 16 | XVI SICKNESS UNTO DEATH~For several days
4028 12 | other day, "Senza brama sicura ricchezza,"~seems as if
4029 4 | Mademoiselle des Touchesthe Sieur~Camille Maupin, that is
4030 13 | which sounds~like the sigh of a spook; /we/ have the
4031 12 | could see that woman," she sighed.~ ~"Mamma," said Calyste, "
4032 2 | fixedness of the white and~sightless eyes gave almost the appearance
4033 1 | graceful staff is like a~signature revealing Venice, chivalry,
4034 13 | the waist; they know the significance of things which, to a man,
4035 1 | Guaisnic, full of Breton significances (the roots of which~will
4036 15 | giving to those words a cruel signification which was fully~understood.
4037 20 | imagine what this new fancy signified, she, whose house possessed
4038 22 | but applied to a man it signifies the giver of the feast~who
4039 7 | Sterne is right; names~signify much; mine is a bitter sarcasm.
4040 2 | meditation, one of those total silences which her sister-in-law
4041 3 | III THREE BRETON SILHOUETTES~When night had fairly fallen,
4042 13 | cleverest as well as the silliest of~them, the frankest as
4043 6 | commonplaces of conversation, the silliness of gallantry; and more~especially
4044 23 | manufacturers in bronze and silver-~smiths; he longed to be
4045 8 | the~beautiful linen, the silver-gilt service brought from Paris
4046 1 | gendarme passes you, with his~silver-laced hat, his presence is an
4047 8 | enter the lists against the silverware, the delicate porcelain,
4048 Add | Unconscious Humorists~ ~Simeuse, Admiral de~The Gondreville
4049 6 | to have a certain~vague similitude to man; they have neither
4050 25 | counterpart, the law of similitudes. All~courtesans preserve
4051 21 | tricky, hypocritical, and simulate a coldness I have not,~like
4052 13 | it that it can~never be simulated. Women have a genius for
4053 2 | bin without plunging her sinewy arm into~the depths of it.
4054 18 | pious, loving~girl, attached singly to him, of angelic sweetness,
4055 5 | of~steel springs, and the singularity of his black eyes and fair~
4056 12 | interview in the garden had~singularly encouraged him.~ ~No first
4057 21 | God, which recalls such a sinner; she~needs a thunderbolt."~ ~"
4058 21 | Christian woman is to withdraw a sinning~woman from an evil path,
4059 17 | tranche and taille~or and sinople, on the latter two eagles
4060 6 | to the shoulders without sinuosity, a most signal~characteristic
4061 14 | great talents, too eager to~sip slowly the stupid pleasures
4062 8 | at~Claude, who was slowly sipping a glass of /liqueur-des-iles/.~ ~"
4063 6 | creature, a cross between a siren and an atheist, was~an immoral
4064 18 | quite willing to let his sister-~in-law Clotilde and his
4065 7 | taste of her illustrious sister-author, took a magnificent Persian~
4066 1 | of being~roofed, like the sister-tower, with a pepper-pot. This
4067 26 | at the Opera, obscurely situated~on the lower tier for the
4068 14 | as I was at fourteen or sixteenwhen I was worthy of you. The~
4069 16 | replied the chevalier. "It is sixty-eight years since I have~looked
4070 25 | first I've known to like skeletons.~Your Beatrix knows how
4071 Note| Conti, and Claude~Vignon are sketches of the Comtesse d'Agoult,
4072 3 | rheumatism, a black-silk skull-cap to protect his head from
4073 1 | varied the symmetry of their sky-lines. These~towers are connected
4074 1 | fronts are veneered with slate. Wood, now~decaying, counts
4075 7 | well built of a species~of slaty stone with granite courses,
4076 1 | effect upon the mind as a sleeping-~draught upon the body. It
4077 18 | arms covered with a second sleeve of~puffed tulle, divided
4078 14 | gives to~youth, Calyste slid down to the ledge below
4079 14 | said Gasselin. "I must slide down~there, and they can
4080 14 | at the risk of their~both sliding down into the sea. As he
4081 18 | purest hearts the mud and slime cast~up by hurricanes must
4082 18 | nature more~ethereal than slimy, and hid the courtesan she
4083 7 | the prettiest of Turkish slippers, red and~gold.~ ~"What is
4084 18 | their constitutions; the slough still pleases them. If this
4085 23 | superiorities, she opens the sluice through which~rushes a torrent
4086 7 | ideas, which might have~slumbered forever in the soft torpor
4087 2 | that awakened the echoes slumbering among the darksome~walls
4088 11 | to perpetual care, to the slyness of cats, to~traps laid for
4089 6 | slightest~blemish nor the smallest wrinkle. There, again, we
4090 24 | abandoned~creature, she smells of the frying of hell-fire;'
4091 22 | receive dull rich people~and smirched people; and only departed
4092 23 | manufacturers in bronze and silver-~smiths; he longed to be another
4093 8 | triumphant look as she smoothed the cloth, a~cascade of
4094 7 | where the thick~carpet smothered the sound of his steps;
4095 14 | caused by the sight of~a snake, and which Calyste felt
4096 18 | his age it was so easy to snare him on his worst~side.~ ~"
4097 12 | exclaimed Calyste.~ ~He snatched up his hat and ran to Les
4098 8 | the world again,~even by snatches, and the attentions I receive
4099 8 | dinner, Monsieur Calyste, and snipe, and~pancakes such as I
4100 14 | slopes, are~oppressed by the snow-topped Alps; but I have never seen
4101 6 | youth was wrapped in the snows of knowledge and the ice~
4102 3 | from the other her silver snuff-box, thimble,~knitting-needles,
4103 12 | such an answer. Du~Halga snuffed the air and stroked his
4104 25 | my dear, you'll have~to soak yourself for five or six
4105 11 | her hookah with~tobacco soaked in opium, she spent the
4106 18 | awaited Beatrix in a salon of sober character,~where all the
4107 1 | may still be seen an iron socket, from~which a few weak plants
4108 9 | flung himself on one of the sofas in the bedroom, the door
4109 6 | delicacy of~sentiment and the softer terms of thought that are
4110 10 | painfully aware of the stockings soiled~among the rocks as she had
4111 18 | wandering life had led her to~sojourn, gave the measure of what
4112 2 | guerilla, a~cannoneer, a common solder, a leader; hands still white
4113 10 | Calyste. Then you took me, as soldiers use fascines to build~entrenchments
4114 17 | which I am soon to repudiate solemnlyyou have cast~her, daring and
4115 19 | which she forced him to solicit for two hours; a pardon
4116 18 | Breton noble. The motherly solicitude of a wife who is anxious~
4117 1 | however lessening their solidity. The~door of the house must
4118 8 | rapidly perhaps, but more solidly, a rich nobleman."~ ~"Your
4119 23 | social questions they~seek to solve. Society on its grand scale
4120 8 | Turk of the intellect made~somnolent by meditation. Criticism
4121 21 | induce her to dismiss my son-~in-law."~ ~"My daughter,"
4122 24 | Arnolphe. Now, that is how your son-in-~law loves Beatrix. I shall
4123 8 | quarrelled?"~ ~"No."~ ~"Play me a sonata of Beethoven's; I know nothing
4124 4 | Blues; they~sang wicked songs which made those virtuous
4125 18 | wings."~ ~"I shall make a sonnet on that thought," replied
4126 23 | not redeem the unpleasant~sonority of his name by birth; he
4127 6 | which a woman occupies, and soothes and~interests the man she
4128 13 | wind had~ceased to blow. A soothing southerly breeze was ruffling
4129 6 | practised upon him all kinds of sorceries. More than one young~girl
4130 8 | Venice, a summer-~house at Sorrento, a villa in Florence? All
4131 8 | tears fell, two~pearls of sorrowful motherhood, "mamma, don'
4132 4 | the basket, he wins one sou. The~player who fails to
4133 1 | goblets, an ancient embossed soup-tureen, and two salt-cellars, all
4134 20 | depths of her heart, turn sour and rot the delicate~roots
4135 2 | re-established, were to him a source of bitter sadness.~ ~About
4136 1 | Brittany,~and Avignon in the south of France, which preserve
4137 17 | this motto~in its beak: /Souviegne-vous/.~ ~Yesterday we went to
4138 18 | are all charming;~Satan sowed themfor the devil has flowers
4139 14 | compact, well-nourished, and sown, no~doubt, by birds. The
4140 9 | her forehead,~lighted the spangles of her eyes, and ran through
4141 9 | The waist, which could be~spanned by the hands, had a charming
4142 12 | common-sense," said Felicite, not~ ~sparing him an open rebuke.~ ~Calyste
4143 16 | weakened like a man whose vital~spark is gone, whose soul has
4144 15 | sympathy. Unfortunately, the sparkle in her eyes belied~the sadness
4145 21 | Blessed Virgin~for you, with special supplication. Good-bye,
4146 24 | of art,~mental and moral specialties, sciences, professions;
4147 22 | five thousand~francs. His specialty was /running horses;/ he
4148 8 | to-morrow darkened with~little speckles beneath its surface, as
4149 14 | compare them with~other great spectacles of primeval Nature. Perhaps
4150 9 | the young~Breton's feet sped along. Some unknown vigor
4151 11 | mate him, Calyste~remained speechless and even mindless.~ ~"Why
4152 17 | than young women, and then, speedily,~fifty times more unhappy.
4153 10 | and he is now under the spell. You have dug your own grave.~
4154 1 | Guaisqlains (the name~is also spelled in the olden time du Glaicquin),
4155 2 | follow henceforth the modern~spelling) consisted of Monsieur and
4156 3 | dissipated, and declared him a~spendthrift. Impossible to say what
4157 25 | Paris by~these great female spendthrifts, for the choiceness of their~
4158 21 | s wax made of rouge and spermaceti and cold~cream. I am straightforward;
4159 13 | the wit and~beauty of a sphinx, but don't propound conundrums.
4160 13 | and why?"~ ~"More and more sphinx-like!" said Camille, smiling.~ ~"
4161 6 | the purity of the~heads of sphinxes, polished by the fire of
4162 20 | the English cruets and the spiced sauces; but it soon~became
4163 25 | wore a guipure pelerine of spidery texture, a gown of blue
4164 14 | the sands delightful; she spied the hardy little plants
4165 20 | herself upon~the red-hot spikes of that savage martyrdom!
4166 2 | window and began as usual to spin. Gasselin was still busy~
4167 2 | to ripple in their silken~spirals swaying to the breeze. Fanny
4168 25 | Creoles, to a face full of~spirited details, the features of
4169 15 | the executioner. Young men spit fire and flame; they~leave
4170 18 | ferocity of the Frank,~the spitefulness of the Norman; she wanted
4171 14 | where the granite bulwark is~split into strange reefs, nor
4172 8 | professor of philosophy ever~spluttered to his audience. You admire
4173 13 | Beatrix, "but I will not spoil his life,~or hang like a
4174 10 | chosen for the purpose of not spoiling better ones on the~journey,
4175 17 | Calyste accepts all from me as spoilt children accept things,
4176 13 | sounds~like the sigh of a spook; /we/ have the misfortune
4177 12 | in life. She is pure and spotless; she fulfils her destiny
4178 14 | this moment, and on this~spotthat one of those singular reflections
4179 9 | twilight, beloved of women, was spreading~through the room.~ ~"Here
4180 7 | beauty of the landscape which spreads its broad savanna~beyond
4181 1 | public conveyance than the springless wagon of a carrier who carries~
4182 5 | suppleness and vigor of~steel springs, and the singularity of
4183 2 | perennial~flowers of her springtide among the richer blooms
4184 22 | Arthur the credit of the sprouting of the~precious germs, re-cultivated
4185 15 | execution, the famous "/Pria che spunti~l'aurora/," which Rubini
4186 25 | highly to Beatrix that she, spurred by the praise of the poet,~
4187 4 | frequenting theatres and actors;~squandering her fortune among pamphleteers,
4188 2 | one of those short, thick, squat little Bretons, with~black
4189 8 | profile has an air of being~squeezed between two doors. You will
4190 8 | which gives him a mean and squinting jealousy, brutal when it
4191 25 | Servir/ for motto, and a squire's helmet. It is not much;
4192 16 | during the~emigration, at St. Petersburg, the climate
4193 26 | have drawn a dagger and stabbed you to the heart. Ah, that'
4194 2 | and Calyste,~saw that the stable was in order for the night,
4195 8 | attentions I receive are so many stabs.~I am no longer on a footing
4196 4 | and beautiful being,not a stage-player, a~masquerader, a theatre
4197 1 | plasterer,~nor have they staggered under the weight of added
4198 18 | irreproachable; the powers~thus stagnant in his heart were now to
4199 20 | calorifere which heated the staircases, antechambers, and passages.
4200 13 | see it, and sprang up the stairway~alone. When coffee had been
4201 13 | of her scarf.~ ~"We are staking our lives on this game,"
4202 18 | business it was~to engage a stall had taken it quite near
4203 18 | the door of the orchestra stalls, he saw~the door of the
4204 20 | flowers from her~hair and stamped upon them; she tore off
4205 6 | times like that of a fixed~star. The white of the eye is
4206 9 | delightful flow of the soft curls starred with blue-bells.~ ~Calyste'
4207 5 | looking at her son, with startled~eyes. "Your life is our
4208 6 | more than she talks. She startles by~her silence and by that
4209 25 | superiority in the art of love;~a statement which magnified the count
4210 17 | giving his history,~and also stating certain intentions of her
4211 2 | mules, but always following steadily the path marked out for
4212 25 | Couture, if you want to lead a steady life you had better~accept
4213 10 | the deck of the departing steamer. Beatrix was charming~as
4214 14 | the~marquise to climb the steep ascent to the summit, which
4215 6 | was rich, and she sent for Steibelt when~the time came to perfect
4216 17 | fact, they seem to have stepped~from those old tapestries
4217 22 | and Moscow, architectural steppes~where the wind rustles innumerable
4218 6 | whom her fortune~would be a stepping-stone, and thus increase her own
4219 5 | or~three thousand pounds sterling, from an aunt. This sum,
4220 7 | the poet, by the soldier! Sterne is right; names~signify
4221 19 | coroneted paper; even~our stewards will soon be titled."~ ~
4222 13 | them, we don't pretend to stick a dart into them, or to
4223 7 | dunes, which~resemble a stiffened ocean. The house, fairly
4224 14 | divine conductor! She had stifled earthly~love, and a divine
4225 8 | murder Piola, and stuck~a stiletto into Paesiello. That terrible
4226 3 | fashion echoed~through the stillness of the ancient mansion.
4227 8 | themselves. Mounted on their stilts, they think they~are on
4228 20 | yourselves that those vipers sting,~those slender bonds burn
4229 2 | cross of Saint-Louis, and a stipend~of two thousand francs a
4230 18 | Sabine never knew how to stir my soul in that way," was
4231 5 | meditation, was setting her stitches~with the rapidity of one
4232 22 | hundred thousand francs in stock of the Bank of France and
4233 23 | the last vestige of this stock-gambler's~credit; Aurelie, seeing
4234 22 | streets of~Amsterdam, Milan, Stockholm, London, and Moscow, architectural
4235 2 | knitting, might be~called a stocking-machine incessantly at work; the
4236 22 | as you make a Bourse of~stocks. It is unworthy. Don't you
4237 21 | her innocent~confessions stole from the more serious miseries
4238 2 | baron, a certain savagery, a stolid~calm which resembled the
4239 4 | headaches, the gnawings in his stomach, the~buzzing in his ears,
4240 4 | held fan-shape on their~ ~stomachs, engaged in talking. If,
4241 18 | seen it. Once there, he stoodhe, the son-in-law of the~Duc
4242 11 | the sea itself, with its store of marble~fragments,a world
4243 8 | in which my~memory has stored rich harvests. Have you
4244 8 | and made me a scene; he~stormed, he declaimed, he depicted
4245 1 | which a few weak plants are straggling. This detail, in harmony
4246 12 | Here the Chevalier du Halga straightened himself up with an air that~
4247 13 | you love him?" she said, straightening herself up, and looking~
4248 21 | spermaceti and cold~cream. I am straightforward; but duplicity is more pleasing.
4249 6 | additional~explanation of the strangeness of her life and the nature
4250 17 | high-roads and in face of strangers.~One would think that delicate
4251 18 | puffed tulle, divided by straps and trimmed with lace at
4252 14 | crossed her mind that the strawberries, which~existed no longer,
4253 14 | in case~of thirst, some strawberry lozenges; she now ate several;
4254 19 | whirling in her~brain like straws at the will of a waterspout. "
4255 18 | rather than a tranquil stream flowing between the two~
4256 9 | He reached the shore, strengthened by a stone embankment, at
4257 2 | reading. A ray of sunshine, stretching from one window to the other,~
4258 6 | Stael, far from political strifes, she jokes about Camille
4259 12 | friend Jacqueline.~ ~"Calyste strikes me as half-crazy," replied
4260 2 | carried at the end of a string fastened to the~belt of
4261 7 | shape of sun-shades, others, stripped of~their branches, showing
4262 15 | both the~man and the woman strive for priority of action,
4263 11 | Italy, where genius has striven through~years of toil to
4264 21 | daughter," replied the abbe, stroking his chin, "we are not now
4265 11 | time, seeing the marquise strolling about~the garden, she raised
4266 22 | depths of generous hearts and strong-~boxes by that ignoble phrase, "/
4267 8 | eighteen and twenty-five he strongly~resembled the divine Raffaelle.
4268 14 | in which anger and love struggled for the mastery. Not a~word
4269 14 | all~natures, even the most stubborn. She felt herself inwardly
4270 8 | Carlone to murder Piola, and stuck~a stiletto into Paesiello.
4271 22 | betting man. If you had a stud farm~on your property and
4272 22 | up a brush in a painter's studio, used it half~jestingly,
4273 21 | will always find rocks of stumbling."~ ~"I have discovered a
4274 10 | will see!" said the woman, stung to the quick.~ ~"Farewell,
4275 8 | dignity and their pride are~stupendous; or, in other moods, they
4276 6 | lends them an appearance of stupidity[*]; in like manner, when~
4277 25 | de Trailles was that of a sub-lieutenant~before a marshall of France,
4278 1 | wretched roads with~the sub-prefecture, or the chief city of their
4279 13 | great Voice whose~ ~counsels subdue the strongest will; Beatrix
4280 10 | erect before the two men, subduing both with the~lightning
4281 3 | instead of being, as Napoleon sublimely said, the moral leaders
4282 7 | I could be a humble and submissive~womanAnd yet, I have done
4283 16 | Calyste answered gently and submissively, but~his answers only proved
4284 14 | the cruellest remedy and submits to the most horrible~operation.
4285 13 | to-morrow; he will end by submitting to his fate, especially
4286 6 | did not choose to take a subordinate position, purchased for
4287 22 | A member of all clubs, subscriber to all the absurdities~generated
4288 17 | given you, dear mamma, the substance, or at any rate, the~meaning
4289 22 | thirteenth arrondissement, a~substitute for his wife.~ ~Let us sketch
4290 4 | listened to the rector, who was substituting monologue~for dialogue unconsciously
4291 19 | preservation. Therefore to struggle successfully against a splendid~young
4292 6 | feels, enjoys, and judges, successively; hence~three distinct ages,
4293 18 | she came at once to his succor to relieve his embarrassment.~ ~"
4294 2 | the rich bosom which the suckling of her son had not deformed.
4295 15 | woman~betraying how she sufferedfor she had really paid the
4296 21 | Come, go home, dear sufferer. In view of such misery
4297 12 | girl,~no matter what she suffers. She will find you a free
4298 24 | missions. All this will suffice to explain his interview~
4299 18 | her pose, one word will sufficeit was worthy of the pains
4300 3 | won the confidence~of de Suffren in the Indian Ocean, and
4301 5 | good heiress would have suited the~baroness, who seemed
4302 7 | the floor above are two suites of rooms separated by the
4303 16 | Charlotte,~uneasy at her suitor's silence, looked back and
4304 24 | been the king of~/mauvais sujets/, and I want to make an
4305 17 | obstinate girl,~and trying to sulk; he debating within himself
4306 9 | continued his way rather~sulkily to Guerande, where he finished
4307 13 | cast on Beatrix the most sullen, savage look that female~
4308 5 | word, no~evil thought had sullied the ears or entered the
4309 22 | principally in being the sultan of a four-footed harem,
4310 8 | buy a palazzo in Venice, a summer-~house at Sorrento, a villa
4311 3 | winters at Nantes, and the summers at their estate on the banks
4312 25 | reached an age for respectful summons," retorted Aurelie,~insolently. "
4313 7 | all those elegant, rich, sumptuous, and dainty~things in the
4314 2 | Bretons, with~black hair and sun-browned faces, silent, slow, and
4315 1 | in it; in the middle, a sun-dial; the paths are~gravelled.
4316 7 | trained to the shape of sun-shades, others, stripped of~their
4317 4 | preach a sermon~upon her next Sunday."~ ~"Don't do that!" cried
4318 4 | baroness~would give her sundry hints by pressing her foot
4319 2 | cheerful as that ray of sunlight. Soon the ray took on~the
4320 25 | old fellows who habitually sunned themselves like~wall-fruit
4321 20 | the Opera."~ ~She dressed superbly; she wanted to exhibit herself
4322 8 | very shrewd and~clever, but supercilious. She has an Austrian mouth;
4323 8 | leave me. She obtained the superficial~people who are friends with
4324 9 | shoulders)~that description is superfluous. Conti was rather proud
4325 9 | tears he was~suppressing by superhuman efforts. She asked him in
4326 25 | showman who consented to superintend this~debut. Nathan was a
4327 18 | architect Grindot, under the superintendence of Clotilde~and the Duc
4328 23 | down all~recognized social superiorities, she opens the sluice through
4329 18 | natures the seal of their own~superiorityif indeed they do not openly
4330 7 | by a light, a~spirit, a supernatural atmosphere, strange and
4331 19 | which were just beginning to supersede the inconvenient~cabriolet
4332 5 | sentiment blues their sight and~supersedes all others for the moment.~ ~
4333 3 | plans seemed to~authorize a supervision. Not that her ideas were
4334 8 | Mademoiselle des Touches cast a supplicating look on Calyste, which~calmed
4335 21 | Virgin~for you, with special supplication. Good-bye, my dear Sabine;
4336 17 | eagles argent for his own supporter and put this motto~in its
4337 7 | enlivened by two~brick columns supporting an arch, beneath which carriages
4338 21 | structure of their clay,~it supports, it is a force.~ ~"Come,
4339 9 | could read the tears he was~suppressing by superhuman efforts. She
4340 19 | death of my daughter, I am sureAll this, Monsieur~Dommanget,
4341 2 | This utter silence is the surest indication of an~unalterable
4342 16 | saintly woman; I am her surety for~that. She has none but
4343 6 | temples, illuminated by~surfaces which catch the light, and
4344 1 | coiled like a tape-worm in a surgeon's phial. The windows which
4345 7 | with the arched head-board surmounted by~Cupids scattering flowers,
4346 2 | General Travot. He refused to~surrender the fortress, and when it
4347 19 | despair, neglect also their surroundings, so discouraged~are they.
4348 13 | You know me; I shall never survive the~loss of Calyste, but
4349 7 | her as a woman, and it had survived the~repeated and inexplicable
4350 22 | world of Fanny Beaupre, Susanne du~Val-Noble, Florine, Mariette,
4351 8 | Gennaro has not alarmed my~susceptible jealousy. I don't as yet
4352 4 | delightful pettiness of~suspecting each other. Mademoiselle
4353 15 | sword of~Damocles was not suspended over her head; she is neither
4354 11 | You know very well how suspicious Conti~can be; if he knew"~ ~ ~"
4355 15 | frankly. I have~not come here suspiciously. Beatrix loves me,"this
4356 14 | with tears, he was silent, swallowing down his~prayers, his arguments,
4357 1 | scattered among those melancholy~swamps where the salt is made,
4358 9 | melancholy, the~farewell of two swans to life. When it was over,
4359 8 | the new doctrines, which~swarmed, during the three years
4360 23 | decomposition; are they not the swarming of~maggots in the dead body?
4361 1 | exception; population no longer swarms there; the social movement
4362 6 | dark hair, brown eyes, and swarthy complexions in a region
4363 8 | a little~vessel, Danish, Swedish, or Norwegian, in the offing."~ ~
4364 13 | the~look in the powerful sweep of her eye.~ ~Under the
4365 12 | that~Camille is a man; she swims, hunts, smokes, drinks,
4366 11 | suffered~the blue network of swollen veins to be visible, and
4367 18 | The desire of the man is a syllogism~which draws conclusions
4368 2 | O'Brien was one of those sylphs,~strong in tenderness, invincible
4369 17 | compatibility of temper,~physical sympathies, harmonies of character,
4370 11 | written once to Conti, a symptom of indifference which had~
4371 7 | of Guerande, in the two systems brought face to face~before
4372 8 | which are something like tabernacles.~ ~"Here's the letter,"
4373 17 | farmhouses, dinners on~oaken tables, covered with centenary
4374 13 | with a~chilling air and a taciturn manner, indicated to an
4375 22 | Madame Schontz, a triumph of tactics, ought to reveal~to you
4376 8 | violin, Liszt on the piano, Taglioni in the~ballet, and what
4377 17 | party couped, tranche and taille~or and sinople, on the latter
4378 12 | mind. In all young men not tainted~by corruption such a letter
4379 4 | and~filled her mind with tales about Mademoiselle des Touches
4380 6 | height, though~she looks taller than she really is. This
4381 6 | rebellious.~There, above all, as Talma once remarked, is seen depicted
4382 6 | bears away a kid in its talons,to~study him, and decide
4383 20 | like a goat caught in the tangle of its~tether, which struggles
4384 9 | modern music. The passage /Di tanti palpiti/ expresses love~
4385 1 | own length~coiled like a tape-worm in a surgeon's phial. The
4386 8 | straight and white as a church taper; her face is long and pointed;~
4387 4 | said his wife, gently tapping the bony calloused~hand
4388 5 | lead to many evils; it will~tarnish the look of those eyes,
4389 14 | silence to~what she called her Tarpeian rock.~ ~"My friend," she
4390 9 | of a chest covered with tarred cloth on~which were painted
4391 20 | and Certainty made no long tarrying. Certainty is never~wanting,
4392 7 | with fringes and cords and tassels worthy of a church. This
4393 22 | his fathers. After having tasted the~displeasures of marriage
4394 10 | witty, accomplished, and~tasteful, who, at the present moment,
4395 7 | is greatness behind those tatters; I hope to galvanize that~
4396 3 | sun. His skin retained the tawny color it received in India,~
4397 1 | salt-marshes,~which pays a tax of not less than a million
4398 1 | that of du Guaisqlain. The tax-~gatherer now writes the
4399 11 | the baroness produced a tea-~caddy. The illustrious house
4400 21 | And I, a noble~woman, must teach myself impurity and all
4401 5 | taught him English, and a teacher of mathematics was found,~
4402 2 | Gasselin was as~a man. No team could be better matched,
4403 11 | their wrappings a silver teapot and some beautiful~old English
4404 15 | without delicacy; show her a tearfor you can weep, you are still~
4405 6 | ridiculed her~studies and teased her about her unwillingness
4406 13 | degenerate usually~into teasing.~ ~"I am tired," he said,
4407 6 | masterpieces with which Italy~teems; gave her the frankness,
4408 9 | himself; but the inward tempest went down as soon as the
4409 13 | returned~to those treacherously temporizing courses which are so attractive
4410 16 | Croisic since the day that~temptation became almost irresistible.
4411 25 | little Madame~Schontz had tended towards ebonpoint ever since
4412 22 | Madame Schontz became the tenderest of~mothers to Arthur's son;
4413 18 | a servant.~ ~A thousand tendernesses, dear mamma. Ah! if my terrors
4414 5 | society by abjuring the gentle tenets of her sex. A~woman commits
4415 22 | Montmartre, pitching their tents in those solitudes of~carved
4416 1 | to them? Before 1789 the tenure of the fiefs subject to~
4417 25 | and Madame Schontz finally~terminated the struggle by saying to
4418 7 | off from~the main road of /terra firma/, stands a country-house,
4419 4 | was living again in some~terrestrial paradise of a past that
4420 14 | He denied your right to test our hearts, and to yield
4421 8 | making my last will and testament like a woman on the verge
4422 8 | travelling I saw his courage~tested; he risked the life he loved;
4423 4 | the~metal shining, which testified to the care his housekeeper
4424 18 | Persian cloth, all bore~testimony to former opulence, the
4425 25 | dress and spend the evening /tete-~a-tete/ with Fabien.~ ~Monsieur
4426 20 | caught in the tangle of its~tether, which struggles till death
4427 23 | in the other direction. Thankful to find a place for~himself
4428 12 | youthand you have called me thatwould honor~a queen. Therefore,
4429 6 | commotions, the glamour of that theatrical~play of three months which
4430 10 | helped the Fathers to people theirs with sacred images. It~is
4431 8 | martyrs. Once started on that theme, Gennaro reaches the most~
4432 11 | as she played, on certain~themes chosen, unconsciously to
4433 18 | all charming;~Satan sowed themfor the devil has flowers as
4434 13 | interesting when we raise themthis way."~ ~Mademoiselle de
4435 5 | Christian education. Calyste thenceforth received the~instruction
4436 14 | Touches, who read~a book of theological mysticism while Calyste
4437 8 | talk metaphysics and music, theology~and painting. You will see
4438 | thereby
4439 | thereupon
4440 6 | Pitt and Coburg. The 9th Thermidor released them.~Felicite'
4441 8 | depressions, the outlines are thickening;~leaden tones predominate
4442 3 | other her silver snuff-box, thimble,~knitting-needles, and other
4443 1 | minds of painters, artists, thinkers who have visited~the slopes
4444 17 | found her slightly changed, thinner and paler; but she seemed
4445 16 | They attributed~Calyste's thinness to want of food. His mother
4446 12 | Kergarouet and release two-~thirds of the estate. By selling
4447 8 | then expires. Her eyes are thirsty.~She looks best when seen
4448 7 | must have parted us. I am thirteen years~older than /he/, and
4449 18 | the fatal portal of the thirties, they look~for weapons,
4450 23 | debatable to a bachelor of thirty-~eight whom the revolution
4451 2 | were often bloody from the thorns and furze of the~Bocage;
4452 22 | and who plant too many thorny hedges around~happiness,
4453 6 | she studied harmony~and thorough-bass, and composed the music
4454 12 | air, as he said,~ ~"When thoroughbred horses want to leap a barrier,
4455 10 | arrived now,~swept along by thoughtless happiness, like a circling
4456 12 | put up with;~inexorable thoughtsfrom my heart, not yourswould
4457 8 | intervals his little glass.~ ~"I thoughtwell, that Parisian women were
4458 2 | Gasselin's, three hundred.~But thousands of francs offered to them
4459 14 | solitude, and went on and on,~threading her way among the fissures
4460 6 | nor strewn with scarlet~threads, nor is it purely white;
4461 2 | gave him an expression both~threatening and proud. His chin seemed
4462 8 | choose to live tranquilly, thriftily, in~obscurity,but in the
4463 14 | plant of box. Calyste felt a thrill of delight as he helped
4464 9 | and serpentine~shape which thrilled him. Without being aware
4465 8 | Must I never tremble or throb or fear or gasp,~or lie
4466 10 | on me, but the heart was throbbing for Calyste.~You have never
4467 23 | threaten institutions, the~throne, or whatever does not adore
4468 14 | see how the salt harvest throve, were on the jetty, admiring~
4469 4 | giddy, was lucky in her bold throws, her aunt on their~return
4470 2 | careless manner~in which she thrust back the needle without
4471 14 | some stuff, and then the thud of~a body falling on the
4472 13 | this thought came like a thunder-clap. She~went over in her mind
4473 26 | the rue de Chartres with thundering rapidity,that~of Calyste,
4474 15 | Beatrix?" asked Calyste, thunderstruck.~ ~"You have been duped
4475 11 | his mother would be angry; Thursday you wanted to take~a walk
4476 15 | the secret tragedy of many thwarted passions~had begun, they
4477 | thy
4478 7 | growing against wind~and tide (for them the saying is
4479 1 | the flux and reflux of the tides and the dunes,the~summit,
4480 10 | Nowhere, Gasselin."~ ~"/Tiens/! here comes the coach from
4481 26 | obscurely situated~on the lower tier for the purpose of not being
4482 9 | They bear on a shield tierce fessed azure, gules and
4483 22 | hired; but he granted a tiger very graciously. Madame~
4484 6 | resemble those of~cats or tigers; it has not that terrible
4485 9 | movements; his throat was tight, his heart swelled, his
4486 19 | in her arms, and held him tightly to her breast~with her head
4487 2 | the~ceiling, danced on the time-worn chests, spread its shining
4488 21 | horrible womanI conquered for a~timeI am pregnant againand Calyste
4489 11 | and I love his girlish timidity. My~soul rests in his heart
4490 16 | risking that opinion very~timidly.~ ~"Come, come, old gray-beard,
4491 26 | himself behind her, and timing their arrival at a late~
4492 5 | have a pass-key and the tinder-box."~ ~"You know very well,
4493 18 | eyes; for her the eyes are tinted with the~dominant thought,
4494 26 | me, he retreated on the tips of his toes to~the dining-room,
4495 18 | distinguished, and well-bred, who tirewithout their knowledge,~possiblyof
4496 11 | wrists, where the transparent tissue suffered~the blue network
4497 3 | another~ten thousand, a tithe collected by him,charging
4498 26 | retreated on the tips of his toes to~the dining-room, where
4499 11 | entrapping her rival in her~toils. She sent her to bed that
4500 8 | in the complexion, giving tokens of~weariness, although the
4501 10 | flimsy lace. Her gait was tolerably bold and cavalier, which,
4502 17 | jealous of this voice from a tomb, these hands~uplifted to
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