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4503 25 | not aware of it, Finot's tool), revealed to the Comte
4504 25 | clock, Maxime was chewing a toothpick and talking with du~Tillet
4505 8 | offers many that are very toothsome,those looks, for instance,~
4506 10 | roused him fully from his torpid contemplation~of the future.
4507 15 | day in a state of~complete torpidity. Just before dinner was
4508 25 | talking with du~Tillet on Tortoni's portico, where speculation
4509 14 | strangely devious waylike the tortuous rocky path before herover~
4510 11 | indifferent,a course which tortured him. Felicite brought forward
4511 21 | furious. Ah! I~ ~suffer such tortures that I cannot endure them
4512 5 | anxieties which were now torturing the baroness, they~tremble
4513 7 | finally the mighty ocean~tossing its foaming fringe upon
4514 9 | Camille, was the sign of a totally~different character in Beatrix.~ ~
4515 4 | cause, and Mademoiselle des Touchesthe Sieur~Camille Maupin, that
4516 6 | family of the same name in Touraine,~to which belongs the ambassador
4517 1 | ceilings~of Tristan's house at Tours. If so, it would prove that
4518 22 | stucco, they have gone, towed by speculation, along the~
4519 22 | the house is near the line traced by the~rue de Provence,
4520 19 | Dommanget, will put you on the track of her real illness and
4521 14 | where boats and vessels tracked a vast~expanse, and the
4522 7 | This desert contains waste tracts, ponds of unequal size,~
4523 22 | the~managers of theatres trade in artists; you degrade
4524 1 | manners and~customs. The tradition of this splendor still lives
4525 17 | anxious to hand down~their traditions, do not always see the bearing
4526 15 | than she wished it to be; a tragic drama developed at that
4527 Note| dealing as he did with~traits of character and the minute
4528 18 | Rizzio, whom no engagement trammelled, a man absolutely free,
4529 17 | the little people gaily tramp the roads, sitting down
4530 17 | which are: party couped, tranche and taille~or and sinople,
4531 22 | thousand francs by that transaction and Aurelie did not ask
4532 1 | fabliaux/, it is impossible to transcribe them here.~These tapestries,
4533 23 | saturnalias of the~Revolution transferred to the domain, apparently
4534 18 | changed; and yet, although the transformation~had seriously affected her
4535 1 | these old cities will be transformed and seen no more except
4536 3 | of Calyste, the plan of transmitting her property to the~chevalier
4537 19 | for the footman and in the transport of her fever she found~strength
4538 19 | one of those magnificent transports which can be~counted, and
4539 6 | ice~of reflection. This transposition is, in truth, an additional~
4540 11 | the slyness of cats, to~traps laid for innocence and all
4541 10 | had~worn on the boat. Her travelling-dress, of some common stuff, chastely~
4542 2 | against the forces of General Travot. He refused to~surrender
4543 13 | minds and returned~to those treacherously temporizing courses which
4544 25 | of women~are principally treasured; so that fine heads will
4545 20 | XX A SHORT TREATISE ON CERTAINTY: BUT NOT FROM
4546 18 | are all cowards in their treatment of women. Go, monsieur,
4547 1 | would dissipate them. The trefoils of the~hotel du Guaisnic
4548 8 | ladders for~me, no rotten trellises to cling to and not fall?
4549 2 | antique lamp, and said in a tremulous voice, while Gasselin replaced~
4550 8 | please him. Such a passion trenches on~the fable of Narcissus.
4551 4 | man's life is one of the trials~of motherhood. I have prepared
4552 1 | summit, as it were, of a triangle, at the corners of which
4553 7 | each side of it. Under the triangular point of each~gable a circular
4554 15 | you will let yourself be tricked by the most wily man I~have
4555 21 | ought to be~manoeuvring, tricky, hypocritical, and simulate
4556 18 | there with dead-gold silken trimmings, the~floor covered with
4557 1 | Christian art is~faithful to the Trinity. In this respect Venetian
4558 9 | homage. Let us sing this~trio. Beatrix, my dear, come."~ ~
4559 16 | and down.~ ~These solitary trips, his silence, his gravity,
4560 1 | on the plank ceilings~of Tristan's house at Tours. If so,
4561 10 | Trim produces his cap in~"Tristram Shandy."~ ~"You are a fortunate
4562 7 | full, but the fascinating~trivialities of a woman's existence encumber
4563 8 | Verneuils, the d'Esgrignons,~the Troisvilles, and gave them a peerage
4564 1 | antiquity and~fortune as the Trojans were to the Romans. The
4565 4 | mother.~ ~"Oh! that of a trollop," replied the rector,"a
4566 21 | years I appear to be /de trop/," said~Clotilde, laughing.
4567 25 | it understood, toward the~tropical regions of love. These two
4568 14 | atmosphere like that of the~tropics. The salt shone up like
4569 10 | Parisians.~ ~Calyste, who was trotting slowly beside the carriage,
4570 1 | and dates than with the truer history of manners and~customs.
4571 6 | flatteries they accept as truths; she laughed at things that
4572 9 | the /Dunque il mio bene tu mia sarai/, the last~duet
4573 12 | fine, the breeze~nor'east. /Tudieu/! how the 'Belle-Poule'
4574 11 | said we had engagements; Tuesday the dinner was poor; Wednesday~
4575 18 | second sleeve of~puffed tulle, divided by straps and trimmed
4576 12 | you are not happy."~ ~This tumultuous poem of sentiments which
4577 2 | five crossings through a turbulent sea in open boats, had weighed~
4578 8 | to see the twistings and turnings Conti would~perform. My
4579 11 | picture; but alas! you are but twenty-eight, in the full magnificence~
4580 4 | Les Touches. In all~the twenty-four years since she came of
4581 25 | and Madame~Antonia is only twenty-six! And what a woman! I may
4582 20 | is for a young woman of twenty-three in~finding herself alone
4583 19 | the end of three years,~at twenty-two years of age!"~ ~Her teeth
4584 13 | our~sleeves like this, or twist our bodies like that; we
4585 8 | result, I wanted to see the twistings and turnings Conti would~
4586 12 | de Kergarouet and release two-~thirds of the estate. By
4587 25 | m a man to~propose mere twopenny infamies to you? No, you
4588 26 | exaltation too~poetic for typography, in which she compromised
4589 17 | do is right, even if he tyrannizes a trifle over her.~ ~Guerande,
4590 17 | son. I see a variety of tyrants in an only~son. So, mamma,
4591 7 | when no one suspected the~ultimate value of such treasures.
4592 26 | Entrenched in that hard /ultimatum/, she established the blockade~
4593 24 | and I will undertake to~/un-cotton-night-cap/ her. Will this suit you,
4594 9 | of her. Calyste was quite~unaffected by questions of fortune;
4595 2 | surest indication of an~unalterable will.~ ~This last effort,
4596 10 | quietly supposed her future unassailable; she arrived now,~swept
4597 6 | in such a woman something~unattainable, unpossessable, unconquerable.
4598 11 | sealed book, and she~was even unaware of her own ignorance, Fanny
4599 9 | his hopes, his fears, his uncertainties. Mademoiselle~des Touches
4600 1 | immutable customs, their unchangeable physiognomies. The public~
4601 14 | in depth, purity,~extent, unchanging and eternal duration, that
4602 7 | the~other the sameness of uncivilized Brittany. No one will therefore
4603 14 | said, opening her eyes and unclosing her pallid lips.~ ~Calyste
4604 10 | you will, I think, be very~uncomfortable in the carrier's vehicle,
4605 11 | she saw him; the solitary uncomprehended desire of his~ ~soul, which
4606 18 | I said one day, with an~unconcerned little air:~ ~"What sort
4607 13 | guileless, sincere, and unconditional as that of this~youth, this
4608 23 | whatever does not adore them unconditionally. So soon as a~nation has,
4609 6 | unattainable, unpossessable, unconquerable. The woman of strong mind~
4610 18 | that moralists have not yet uncovered that side of vice.~There
4611 3 | them in phrases of that unctuous civility which priests~are
4612 2 | news reached him.~ ~No one undeceived him. The gift was really
4613 7 | atmosphere, strange and undefinable. The modern~world with its
4614 20 | scarf and~trampled them underfoot, like a goat caught in the
4615 14 | Beatrix was at this moment undergoing an inward~struggle; she
4616 19 | and presently began an~underhand attack on the luxury of
4617 6 | pupil~has depth; it is not underlaid, as in certain eyes, by
4618 7 | author to pluck, no system to undermine, no poet~to drive to despair,
4619 18 | excitements of "the~turf," undermined before long many of the
4620 12 | maid with a louis or two~underneath it; for sooner or later
4621 13 | shall die without being~understoodor loved," she added.~ ~She
4622 11 | them~across the little bay, undertaking herself to provide horses
4623 21 | if the young fellow who undertook to make Madame de~Rochefide
4624 26 | position of the~marquise was undignified. You will, therefore, no
4625 23 | things.~ ~Modern equality, unduly developed in our day, has
4626 15 | were forever parted by an undying hatred.~ ~"Calyste remains
4627 1 | battlements entire, its loopholes unencumbered with~vegetation; even ivy
4628 7 | contains waste tracts, ponds of unequal size,~round the shores of
4629 2 | turquoise blue, shone with unequalled sweetness; the soft~lashes,
4630 8 | assuming indifference to his~unfaithfulness. I analyze all this in order
4631 17 | beautiful new life with unfaltering step and never a~glance
4632 9 | was much superior to the~unflattered portrait Camille had drawn
4633 21 | Macumer.~Excessive passion is unfruitful and deadly. And remember,
4634 4 | Mademoiselle de Pen-Hoel. That~ungodly woman, Mademoiselle des
4635 13 | they are all unjust and~ungrateful," continued Beatrix. "Women
4636 13 | and gloom, happiness and unhappiness, the extinction of hopes~
4637 22 | without a debt,~a thing unheard of in the faubourg Saint-Germain
4638 8 | not being able, during its unhoped-for triumph in the~fifteen years
4639 17 | dressed in their finest uniforms, for each carriage was drawn
4640 6 | disillusion in 1818. The house was~uninhabitable, and she sent her man of
4641 14 | through that lonely and~almost uninhabited region with incredible rapidity.~ ~
4642 14 | Their steps were taken in~unison,the gait of all lovers,their
4643 12 | not the~impossibility, of uniting in one person two great
4644 13 | way of men, they are all unjust and~ungrateful," continued
4645 17 | Many bourgeois critics unjustly deny the innocence and virtue
4646 12 | are my~truth.~ ~You have, unknowingly, destroyed my happiness,
4647 8 | henceforth from obedience, from unlimited gentleness; I must~make
4648 14 | she had need of him. This~unlooked-for pleasure turned his head;
4649 19 | prudent mother threw the unlucky paper into the fire as she
4650 6 | that period. She had, not unnaturally,~neglected the minor accomplishments.
4651 14 | between a second and an unpardonable love, and social~rehabilitation.
4652 6 | something~unattainable, unpossessable, unconquerable. The woman
4653 8 | being unexpected, found him~unprepared. Beatrix left a letter for
4654 19 | any rate, the fame which unprincipled~conduct gives. The misfortune
4655 22 | figures of the sums remaining~unproductive and lost in the depths of
4656 3 | kiss~it. "She is getting unpunctual. Can it be that the fashion
4657 12 | devotion, unbounded faith, love unquenchable,all these~treasures of a
4658 12 | devoted slave; I should be an unreasonable tyrant. Besides,~Camille
4659 12 | and that passing alms, unremembered, alas! by you, will~be eternal
4660 13 | of God, he~flings himself unreservedly into Catholicism, which,
4661 6 | inspired found her cold and~unresponsive. Hurt by her aunt and her
4662 13 | was playing, and her own, unrolled~themselves to their fullest
4663 13 | men and women, but~fatally unsafe among women alone. In the
4664 26 | sound; they have not been unsealed. I knew in~advance what
4665 12 | you ill appreciate; she is unselfish; she lives only for~you
4666 8 | though she knows it not, unshakable. She has~told me of the
4667 11 | silence. Camille endured unspeakable~ ~martyrdom, and she cast
4668 23 | a~nation has, in a very unstatesmanlike spirit, pulled down all~
4669 11 | power of a lion, tranquilly unsuspicious of its royalty. When he~
4670 3 | drive away the dogs who paid untimely court to a~favorite little
4671 | UNTO
4672 8 | powers of thought~remain untouched. Yet his intellect, which
4673 10 | weight too heavy for his untried~soul to bear. Goaded by
4674 1 | This rich, coy nature, so untrodden, with all the grace of~a
4675 5 | agitated. In this tranquil, untroubled life such a discussion was~
4676 9 | emotions rise like~poems in the untutored soul. Warmed by the first
4677 7 | their full effect upon his unused heart. In short, the~great
4678 10 | evident humiliation at~this unveiling of her grandeur made Calyste
4679 6 | and teased her about her unwillingness for society, which they~
4680 8 | But, Calyste, do not be unwise, imprudent; try to~love
4681 2 | skin, grown hard, could~not unwrinkle. The difficulty of shaving
4682 17 | from a tomb, these hands~uplifted to heaven, imploring blessings
4683 16 | joining in the spiritual uplifting~of Mademoiselle de Guenic.~ ~"
4684 7 | weird formationsthat sight uplifts the mind although~it saddens
4685 22 | THE NORMAL HISTORY OF AN UPPER-CLASS GRISETTE~A storm was gathering,
4686 7 | must be playing on a small~upright piano brought by Conti from
4687 4 | All Guerande is turned upside down about~Calyste's passion
4688 19 | nymphs from their inclining urns. Sabine burst into~tears.~ ~
4689 1 | every~step of the habits and usages of long-past times; the
4690 25 | ennobled was probably an usher.~But if you get rid of Arthur
4691 25 | for there is nothing so usurping in Paris as that~which ought
4692 17 | a woman's life. Between usury and prodigality, my child,
4693 1 | sabres, two game-bags, the utensils~of a huntsman and a fisherman
4694 22 | those women whose social utility~cannot be questioned by
4695 6 | invented to restrain or utilize the infirmities of~womankind.~ ~
4696 18 | But that's a deceptive~Utopia; better have one's rival
4697 21 | the duchess, Sabine gave utterance to the supreme~cries of
4698 21 | Saint-Germain appointed to a vacant bishopric in 1840 (an~office
4699 25 | to see this king of the vagabonds of good~society.~ ~"He will
4700 14 | yielding herself up to the vagueness of~her position, looked
4701 1 | by~curtains, with heavy valances and stout cords, of an ancient
4702 22 | extreme misery, when, at Valentino's (the~first stage to Musard)
4703 14 | Chartreuse over all other narrow~valleys. Neither the coasts of Croisic,
4704 23 | possessing a life-interest in a~valuable estate in Alencon. This
4705 2 | those choice old men whom Van Ostade, Rembrandt,~Mieris,
4706 1 | grinds, as it turns, the~vane of a noble.~ ~Let us not
4707 18 | Beatrix, all these reasons vanish before a single wordI~have
4708 1 | second road, leading from Vannes, which connects it with
4709 24 | though I shall no doubt vanquish them. Your~esteem and your
4710 14 | waves. A sort of glowing vapor, an effect of the rays of
4711 1 | crumbled~under the salty vapors of the atmosphere. Above
4712 11 | another woman.~She played variations, improvising them as she
4713 23 | waistcoat more or less~variegated,in short, with all the external
4714 22 | inherent in social zones) never~varies. The heart and the money-box
4715 18 | went, urged by her, to the Varietes, where a new play~was to
4716 24 | many royalties as there are varieties of art,~mental and moral
4717 2 | and Gasselin, his only vassal, who followed him joyfully.
4718 17 | chatelaine, adored by her vassals~as if the revolutions of
4719 20 | invented various little vaudeville schemes to~ascertain the
4720 14 | will find under a naturally vaulted roof, of a boldness imitated~
4721 22 | now called Ninon II.), by vaunting her scrupulous~honesty,
4722 6 | Shakespeare or Lopez de Vega, published in 1822, which
4723 14 | man, has conveyed enough vegetable earth for~the growth of
4724 1 | nourishment, wither and barely vegetate.~ ~For the last thirty years,
4725 1 | most luxuriant and fertile~vegetations in France. A painter, a
4726 11 | beautiful than ever."~ ~This vehement elegy, in which truth was
4727 10 | uncomfortable in the carrier's vehicle, and especially at having
4728 14 | noble and angelic being, veiled until now by flesh, arose
4729 2 | stockings, breeches of greenish velveteen, a cloth~waistcoat, and
4730 2 | the du Guenics.~ ~The old Vendean, the old Chouan, had, some
4731 1 | and low; their fronts are veneered with slate. Wood, now~decaying,
4732 21 | give me absolution for the venial sins which the deceits of
4733 21 | into a chair. She had given vent to the deepest thought in~
4734 13 | gesture which Calyste did not venture to resist.~ ~As he walked
4735 8 | often~checks the lively, venturesome language of artists so as
4736 6 | Bacchus rather than the Venus Callipyge. There we may
4737 17 | estimated the~rentals with a veracity and justice Parisians would
4738 22 | The noun has become a verb. From the very start of~
4739 10 | which is shaded, dewy, and verdant as a forest~glade, where
4740 8 | condemned to death clings to the veriest trifles of~existence,in
4741 2 | knew, without going up to~verify her knowledge, how large
4742 23 | la Palferine, Gobenheim, Vermanton a cynical~philosopher, all
4743 8 | connected them with the Verneuils, the d'Esgrignons,~the Troisvilles,
4744 23 | son of the late Marechal Vernon, he adorned his coat with
4745 1 | Saint-Nazaire~to Guerande and /vice versa/. Bernus, the carrier, was,
4746 17 | last, as we were leaving Versailles, I turned to Calystewhom~
4747 10 | report the hundred and more versions which~went the round of
4748 1 | this simple escutcheon, the vertical lines~of which, used in
4749 14 | intervals, where boats and vessels tracked a vast~expanse,
4750 23 | 1840 swept away the last vestige of this stock-gambler's~
4751 6 | no jealousy and no~secret vexation.~ ~Until the period when
4752 6 | I know not what,~that is vexatious. More sad, more serious
4753 20 | and sparkling.~ ~"You are vexed with me, Calyste; am I not
4754 6 | VI BIOGRAPHY OF CAMILLE MAUPIN~
4755 26 | or, worse still, in the~vial of an apothecary. I never
4756 17 | linen, bending under Homeric~viands served on antediluvian dishes;
4757 18 | in his heart were now to vibrate for Beatrix. If great~men
4758 11 | that quiver of joy which vibrates in the heart of every woman~
4759 21 | the afternoon, one of the vicars of the~faubourg Saint-Germain
4760 23 | attained his~end. Elected vice-president of some sort of floral society
4761 23 | fictitious~dignities, presidents, vice-presidents, and secretaries of societies,~
4762 25 | education was complete. Vicewhat is it?~Possibly only the
4763 8 | Beatrix would hold her own victoriously with ideal beauties like~/
4764 25 | friend~d'Esgrignon?"~ ~"Victurnien has ceased to know me for
4765 6 | herself, in "L'Histoire de Ma Vie," published~long after the
4766 Note| transition period of the~/vieille roche/ as it passed into
4767 14 | by his feelings and his vigil of love. She heard him murmur
4768 26 | entered the room; but the~vigilance of her old footman, Antoine,
4769 25 | present to you Monsieur Claude VignonMonsieur Claude~Vignon, Monsieur
4770 7 | VII LES TOUCHES~A few hundred
4771 8 | VIII LA MARQUISE BEATRIX~"I promised
4772 8 | summer-~house at Sorrento, a villa in Florence? All loving
4773 1 | leg~made in the shape of a vine-shoot, which stands before a window~
4774 6 | woman and philosopher who violated every~social law invented
4775 2 | His lips, once red, now violet, and~backed by hard gums
4776 8 | what Paganini is on the violin, Liszt on the piano, Taglioni
4777 19 | Suddenly as if bitten by a viper, she left Calyste, threw
4778 20 | to yourselves that those vipers sting,~those slender bonds
4779 6 | a man, on account of the virility of~her first writings. All
4780 11 | innocence and all the youthful virtuesoh, it is~infamous! If it were
4781 3 | above his hands a plump visage, and a generally white skin~
4782 25 | good qualities, with~their viscous lips glued to the glasses
4783 24 | duchesse," cried Maxime, visibly touched, "if Monsieur~le
4784 16 | from~forest to forest, visiting friends and acquaintances
4785 23 | presided~over by the Duc de Vissembourg, brother of the Prince de
4786 1 | The gate when open gives a vista into a somewhat vast court-yard,
4787 16 | weakened like a man whose vital~spark is gone, whose soul
4788 1 | towns after Guerande except Vitre in the centre of Brittany,~
4789 7 | coquettish, so artistic, were vivified, were animated by a light,
4790 22 | another word of the same vocabulary. The~word /rat/, when applied
4791 8 | over those men,he is in vocal music~what Paganini is on
4792 6 | herself coquettish, gay, volatile,a woman, in short. But she~
4793 18 | secretly prepares those volcanic eruptions to which, perhaps,
4794 9 | to sentiments by our~own volition,deliberately bind ourselves,
4795 17 | choicest~wines in goblets to volleys of musketry, accompanied
4796 8 | slim and slender, from~voluminous brocaded skirts with folds
4797 26 | credit opened to a~power so voracious that bankruptcy is sure
4798 4 | of~the Kergarouets, were voted head-splitters, algebraic
4799 21 | duchess; "and I have made a vownot counting a novenato give
4800 Note| Comedy of Human Life."~K.P.W.~
4801 8 | favorable, and I set sail, wafting~you a kiss.~ ~Beatrix.~ ~ ~"
4802 22 | eighty francs each month, a wage that is less than that of
4803 1 | conveyance than the springless wagon of a carrier who carries~
4804 1 | preserved. The panelled wainscot, about~three feet high,
4805 8 | one of the~most exquisite waists I ever saw; the shoulders
4806 25 | fellow dressed like the head-~waiter of a restaurant?" whispered
4807 17 | and in the rumble were two waiting-maids. The four postilions~dressed
4808 12 | reply, which the~marquise's waiting-woman, entering the hotel du Guenic,
4809 17 | nothing so dangerous as to wake a sleeping~passion."~ ~I
4810 4 | Monstrosities?" said the baron, waked up by the word.~ ~The baroness
4811 12 | After the agitations of a wakeful night filled with visions
4812 5 | mother would not have~him wakened. Mariotte served the spoiled
4813 25 | habitually sunned themselves like~wall-fruit at that hour in the afternoon,
4814 17 | seigneur like a personage in Walter Scott! My~lord received
4815 9 | touching him with her divine wand until he stood~in presence
4816 12 | promoting her marriage.~Calyste wandered hither and thither like
4817 2 | the flash of an energy now waning, had caused the~present
4818 17 | called it, a little too wanton (a word I did~not fully
4819 6 | living.~The education of his ward was therefore left to chance.
4820 9 | poems in the untutored soul. Warmed by the first fires of imagination,~
4821 16 | in the~garden on a bench, warming himself in the pale and
4822 8 | made him idle. We have been~warmly received everywhere,though
4823 14 | with its soft and limpid warmth. She~breathed a sweet and
4824 17 | tapestries of the highest warp; in fact, they seem to have
4825 6 | into absorbing love, which warps the mind and faculties of~
4826 10 | to Les Touches, and I'll~warrant he's after her; that's the
4827 16 | sacraments to the old Breton warrior. The whole~town was agitated
4828 11 | could meet with game more wary or more~difficult to capture.
4829 17 | innocent, and a child. I have washed my robes in the tears of~
4830 2 | collarette of many~pleats, the washing of which caused the only
4831 20 | two or three mouthfuls.~ ~"Wasn't it good?" Sabine would
4832 18 | Finally, on the walls, ten~water-colors richly framed, each representing
4833 26 | falling at her feet and watering them with the tears of an~
4834 6 | it went to its death at Waterloo.~The great and noble soul
4835 19 | straws at the will of a waterspout. "I saw," she said~later, "
4836 12 | from my heart, and its hot wave~darkens my intellect, weakens
4837 25 | filled her place in every wayand~does she think to bargain
4838 14 | upon the~strangely devious waylike the tortuous rocky path
4839 5 | for feeble, deformed, or weak-minded offspring.~ ~"You are tired,
4840 8 | voice, never sonorous, is weakening; without being either~hoarse
4841 12 | wave~darkens my intellect, weakens my strength, paralyzes my
4842 12 | you;~why, then, does the weaker feeling rule the stronger?
4843 14 | she saw him re-appear~so weakly.~ ~During his two days'
4844 8 | Mariotte endeavored to wean her young~master from the
4845 18 | thirties, they look~for weapons, seductions, embellishments
4846 10 | protected; though, even them it wearies in the long run. You are~
4847 12 | should~drag you down to a wearisome life, without grandeur of
4848 14 | the less clothing a woman~wears, the more nobly modest is
4849 17 | that is why women weep at a wedding while men smile; men believe
4850 20 | return. It is the first wedge struck in~the torture of
4851 11 | Tuesday the dinner was poor; Wednesday~you were afraid his mother
4852 2 | went to his garden, where weed~or damaging insect was never
4853 14 | could see me then. My mother~weeps for my suffering."~ ~"Listen
4854 2 | turbulent sea in open boats, had weighed~upon his head, and he looked
4855 23 | until it has become the weightiest thing in life.~This ambition
4856 26 | have fist and loins. What weights~you've carried! what cuffs
4857 7 | better to~bring out their weird formationsthat sight uplifts
4858 22 | who are~interested in the welfare of the city of Paris. Certainly
4859 6 | charming~young woman, very well-born, a Breton, named Felicite
4860 8 | I was giving you some well-deserved praise, and that is easier
4861 22 | Saint-Aurelie.~ ~Lively, witty, and well-educated, she committed more faults
4862 17 | relations with my Calyste, I had well-nigh forgotten the serious~situation
4863 14 | of a box-plant, compact, well-nourished, and sown, no~doubt, by
4864 1 | which reigns beneath the well-preserved arch of the~postern, where
4865 8 | impassioned artist is cold as a well-rope. Listen to him: the artist~
4866 24 | Orosmanes, or Saint-Preux, Rene, Werther, and other lovers now in~
4867 2 | all those heroes of the West, the baron, preserved by
4868 7 | opens its cyclopic eye, westerly to the sea,~easterly on
4869 3 | used in certain parts of western France.~ ~Thus this rich
4870 9 | pearled upon his forehead and wet his~back; his arm trembled
4871 3 | filling your granaries with~wheat, rye, and flax, and waiting
4872 10 | bird darting~down upon a wheat-field, and lo! she was stopped
4873 12 | close to the wind that~day whenOh!" he cried, interrupting
4874 8 | is~beloved; he is admired whensoever he will. He owes his success
4875 2 | without sending news of~their whereabouts to the baroness, who never
4876 | wherein
4877 | wherever
4878 11 | my dear, are two spots whichas a certain writer ferreting~
4879 14 | that other~imitation of the whims of Nature. Curious features
4880 17 | to the clacking of four whips, more noisy than the shots
4881 19 | felt that her ideas were whirling in her~brain like straws
4882 25 | purple skin and bristles for whiskers;~he looks like a wild boar
4883 8 | exclamation of joy, and Zephirine whistled for Mariotte.~ ~"Mariotte,
4884 5 | whistle from her pocket and whistling once.~ ~Mariotte came through
4885 19 | she said; "perhaps it will whiten her for you."~ ~And Beatrix,
4886 3 | he exhibited a set of the whitest teeth in the~reddest of
4887 4 | Pen-Hoel.~ ~"That's very wholesome," said the chevalier.~ ~"
4888 1 | have come down to them. Whoso would travel as a moral~
4889 8 | affluents of life,~and this is whybut my muse is dumb," he added,
4890 21 | XXI THE WICKEDNESS OF A GOOD WOMAN~Playing
4891 11 | Admiral~de Kergarouet, whose widow married Charles de Vandenesse?"
4892 10 | My dear, one man to two widows is none too much," said
4893 26 | began to entice my judicial wild-~boar, now turned like Arthur
4894 4 | Mistigris or the trump,a first wile to which he succumbed.~ ~"
4895 13 | penance on a rock for having wilfully killed~his son. Oh! you
4896 11 | win a decisive battle. He willed as lovers will; he was~grasped
4897 9 | Norman family, allied to William the Conqueror," he replied.~"
4898 15 | woman, but he will never willingly let~her leave him. When
4899 13 | our heads like a weeping willow, just to~look the more interesting
4900 1 | Herculaneum of~feudality, less its winding sheet of lava. It is afoot,
4901 1 | the carved material of the window-casings~and the pillars, above which
4902 7 | a stiff little sofa,with~window-curtains of silk, like that of the
4903 1 | plastered~up to avoid the window-tax. This street ends at a postern,
4904 14 | there, dried by the salt sea winds, corroded by the spray,
4905 26 | butsix months hence, next~winterin the hotel de Rochefide.
4906 3 | Kergarouet-Pen-Hoels, who passed the~winters at Nantes, and the summers
4907 12 | Beatrix, a ~sacred love wipes out the past. Yes, I love
4908 16 | Calyste," said the baroness, wiping her~eyes.~ ~"Nothing is
4909 2 | Guenic was a tall, straight, wiry, lean old man. His oval~
4910 13 | those little provincial witcheries which degenerate usually~
4911 13 | and the fire of love were withdrawn.~ ~It is not hope, but despair,
4912 17 | all lands, or that which withdraws from the family and~exhibits
4913 18 | burst into tears!"~ ~Calyste withdrew, after holding out his hand
4914 1 | deprived of nourishment, wither and barely vegetate.~ ~For
4915 10 | here. I shall regret not witnessing~conflicts of passion of
4916 26 | depart after a brilliant witticism, leaving the two lovers
4917 10 | the remarks, replies, and witticisms which~the viscountess heard
4918 26 | if I~do, haven't you the wittiest and handsomest young man
4919 24 | After all, we bear,~azure, a wivern or, darting fire, ongle
4920 21 | distraught was she by her woe.~ ~The speech was uttered
4921 20 | exclaimed Sabine, as she woke the next morning, "Calyste
4922 3 | disapproval. She kept one~woman-servant and the page. Her yearly
4923 7 | a humble and submissive~womanAnd yet, I have done no harm
4924 21 | better of that horrible womanI conquered for a~timeI am
4925 6 | utilize the infirmities of~womankind.~ ~Just as Clara Gazul is
4926 8 | Besides, blondes are~more womanly; we are too like men, we
4927 10 | there is for us poor, simple womenis not that so, madame?" said
4928 6 | magnificently appointed, took their womenkind, even the most~fastidious
4929 15 | distrustful; those two will wonder how we can sit here together~
4930 1 | draw;~these stand out in wonderful relief upon the scene around
4931 18 | effect,~changed at will, and wonderfully manipulated. The presentation
4932 20 | repetition of the fable~of the woodman calling upon Death,we soon
4933 14 | it, a gown of some gray~woollen stuff, and a blue sash with
4934 18 | reasons vanish before a single wordI~have never loved but you
4935 19 | distressed by the laconic wording of her husband's note. Still,
4936 6 | the sands to Les Touches. Workmen came down from~Paris, and
4937 8 | sublime in his contempt for~worldliness; his eloquence seems to
4938 2 | more in keeping with the worn-~out grandeur of their dwelling,
4939 18 | spared Beatrix all the petty worries of material life, and her
4940 19 | and play. But you needn't worry over the thirty~ ~thousand
4941 2 | that concerned~Calyste, the worshipped son of the whole household.~ ~
4942 2 | doing good in secret; she worships, she adores without~a calculation
4943 5 | years might be rendered worthless. This human~masterpiece
4944 2 | without the slightest fear of~wounding herself. She was straight
4945 26 | on the shin and perpetual wrangling and~jarring; in short, all
4946 18 | awaited. The gown, made like a wrapper to show the~line of a white
4947 11 | event issued from their wrappings a silver teapot and some
4948 13 | against Conti. Was the~hidden wrath of the past two years really
4949 14 | hat with wide brims and a wreath~of blue-bells, her crimped
4950 8 | with clouds of lace, and wreathe with roses that angelic
4951 1 | a circular pediment, now wreathed with vegetation,a~bouquet,
4952 17 | bound to tell you of the wreck of that semi-virtue. Dignity,
4953 26 | inferiority of Calyste, who~wriggled in his chair like a worm
4954 5 | supposing~that troubles could wring his heart, attributed his
4955 3 | of a Parliament record, wrinkled as a lake ruffled by the~
4956 7 | the other~for a study and writing-room. The other suite, she has
4957 14 | You are misconceived and wronged, but I know~you, and for
4958 2 | preserved her beauty from the wrongs of time. The~alterations
4959 2 | changes which eighty years had wrought in her features.~Her pale,
4960 1 | are gigantic andirons in~wrought-iron of precious workmanship.
4961 12 | XII CORRESPONDENCE~When Calyste
4962 13 | XIII DUEL BETWEEN WOMEN~Perhaps
4963 19 | XIX THE FIRST LIE OF A PIOUS
4964 17 | XVII A DEATH: A MARRIAGE~Felicite'
4965 20 | XX A SHORT TREATISE ON CERTAINTY:
4966 21 | XXI THE WICKEDNESS OF A GOOD
4967 22 | XXII THE NORMAL HISTORY OF AN
4968 23 | XXIII ONE OF THE DISEASES OF THE
4969 24 | XXIV THE INFLUENCE OF SOCIAL
4970 25 | XXV A PRINCE OF BOHEMIA~The
4971 26 | XXVI DISILLUSIONSIN ALL BUT LA
4972 7 | LES TOUCHES~A few hundred yards from Guerande the soil of
4973 3 | woman-servant and the page. Her yearly expenses, not including
4974 7 | sublime,~creating a regretful yearning for things unknown and yet
4975 21 | angel, who~wants to hide her yellowing teeth. A fresh complexion
4976 3 | like them, from green to yellowish; as for its shape, our present~
4977 25 | have come~for your /beaux yeux/ and for help in a great
4978 14 | part from Beatrix; Beatrix, yielding herself up to the vagueness
4979 17 | respect their mother in youand," she~added, in a low and
4980 19 | once unless you fetch them yourselfgo!"~ ~Calyste, alarmed, rushed
4981 12 | thoughtsfrom my heart, not yourswould poison our~existence and
4982 12 | it so!~The love of noble youthand you have called me thatwould
4983 4 | nephew is not one of those youths who like monstrosities,"~
4984 9 | sarai/, the last~duet of Zingarelli's "Romeo e Giulietta," one
4985 26 | caused to fall from their zodiacal eminence. Public~humiliation
4986 1 | immutability~which science gives to zoological species is found in Breton
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