Chapter
1 I | the high~altar.~ ~At the time of the French expedition
2 II | command of the troops for the time being. This~commonplace
3 II | all~responsibility for the time necessary to carry out his
4 II | sweetness, enhanced at the same time by the consciousness of
5 III | are shortening the little time that we may~be together
6 III | things else in your heart? In time past you~put social success,
7 III | fine mansion, and in our time it was~occupied by a banker.
8 III | never find her behind the time. France~has been led astray
9 III | has been led astray many a time, but she is deluded, woman-like,~
10 III | therefore was brought low for a time. The~Faubourg should have
11 IV | downfall in 1830.~ ~At that time the party of the Faubourg
12 IV | narrow-minded leaders of a time of~great intellectual progress
13 IV | the importation required time, and in~France a tardy success
14 IV | the court ladies of olden~time in their wantonness, nor
15 IV | over the manners of the~time; and yet she might have
16 IV | that living expression of a time, now~counted absolutely
17 IV | When in a nation at any time there is a people apart
18 IV | Huguenots, the~Coadjuteur in the time of the Fronde, the Marechal
19 IV | represents the ideas of his time? The wise and prudent~head
20 IV | to say, in 1816. By that time the~revolution of the Hundred
21 IV | The two families at that time were living quite out of
22 IV | political world. In~that time of general baseness and
23 IV | as so often happens in a time of transition, the~most
24 IV | reflect upon it. It was the time~of the rejoicings over the
25 IV | carried too far. At that time~the Duchess, whether for
26 IV | the petits maitres of the time of the Fronde, nor the rough~
27 IV | Perhaps it takes a long~time for a Restoration to become
28 V | reached~a major's rank at the time of the Fontainebleau disaster.
29 VI | made concessions about that time to~Napoleon's old officers
30 VI | place~soon.~ ~"In an hour's time," said the guide. Armand
31 VI | joke lasts for such~a short time, that everyone is eager
32 VI | world, his life, from this time forth. The greatest joy,
33 VI | her to make him forget how time went.~ ~The length of a
34 VI | that she had forgotten how time was going.~ ~The next moment
35 VI | would have kept away for a time.--Now, I will lay aside
36 VII | not see each other for a time; and then, when~both of
37 VII | congratulated~himself. And so for a time he took unfair advantage
38 VII | point, knew that it was time to leave~her boudoir; she
39 VII | dangerous.~ ~But if the time of her opposition on the
40 VII | the scaffold, as in the time of the Terror--the one method
41 VII | said, and for the first time she looked at him as a~woman
42 VII | months. At the end of that~time the Duchess grew weary of
43 VII | inexcusable. She was young; the time when~men and women feel
44 VII | they cannot afford to lose time or to~quibble over their
45 VII | he hesitated for~a long time. He passed through the experience
46 VII | For a certain length of time she will talk to me~of her
47 VII | from~talking on for some time to come, for poor Armand'
48 VIII| pale; and for~the first time in his life, he fell on
49 VIII| occurred to him for the first time; hitherto he had lived~by
50 VIII| no~occasion to waste your time in grafting your great nature
51 VIII| this subject. A pleasant~time to you, my children," added
52 VIII| he went before there was time to reply.~ ~As for Montriveau,
53 VIII| while a great man at such a time possesses it to the~full.
54 VIII| returned Armand, "I have not time to wait. I am a~spoilt child,
55 VIII| them all."~ ~For the first time, it may be, in a man's heart,
56 VIII| not~help shuddering each time that the card was brought
57 VIII| course of that week. ~Each time, in reply to coquettish
58 VIII| into the room, and this time~Armand was looking out for
59 VIII| themselves by looking on. Every time that SHE came past him,
60 VIII| she went out.~ ~By this time it was about midnight. One
61 VIII| not~occur to her at the time that danger could come from
62 VIII| remain here for a short~time. First of all, I should
63 VIII| friends, that from this time forth I must endure the
64 VIII| knows? Perhaps from this time forth, as you~gracefully
65 IX | help turning her head; this time she distinctly~saw the three
66 IX | Have you been here all the time?" she asked.~ ~"Yes, madame."~ ~
67 IX | drunk, that at any other time she would~have been afraid;
68 IX | end of the immensity of Time steeps it all for us in~
69 IX | imagination, avenging the time lost for nature, took a~
70 IX | tell you this for the last time."~ ~For a week, Mme de Langeais
71 IX | bitterness of~soul, for a long time past.~ ~"So you miss that
72 IX | is not the most horrible time of tempest, while it~increases
73 IX | helped her to bear the long time of waiting. A relapse of~
74 IX | Antoinette does not find time heavy on her hands, it~seems,"
75 IX | nobody at this day. It is time I went out of this world,
76 IX | you were at home all the time, were you~not?" said the
77 IX | mother; I was at home all the time. And," she~added, as she
78 X | woman of the two. In my time a woman could keep her dignity~
79 X | remained~unanswered. This time she took her own measures,
80 X | orange-flower water from~time to time. Suzette heard her
81 X | orange-flower water from~time to time. Suzette heard her mistress
82 X | dine at home today at that time. Very~good. By way of answer
83 X | to look back for the last time on happiness--to you, and
84 X | woman who, in three~hours' time, will live only to overwhelm
85 X | clock was slow, and~by the time he started out for the Hotel
86 X | looked out for the last time through falling tears on
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