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Alphabetical    [«  »]
fellow 3
fellow-countryman 1
fellows 1
felt 43
feminine 12
femme- 1
ferdinand 1
Frequency    [«  »]
46 us
46 words
45 always
43 felt
43 find
43 set
43 under
Honoré de Balzac
The Duchess of Langeais

IntraText - Concordances

felt

   Chapter
1 I | scarcely an hour's distance, he~felt a presentiment that his 2 II | embarkation of~the troops. He felt glad to be the only man 3 II | cloister--a~thought which you felt like a subtle presence in 4 IV | harshness of their creed felt all over the country. Never 5 IV | she pleased so soon as he felt sure of her character. He~ 6 VI | perhaps it was known that he felt bound by his oath~to the 7 VI | for a third of the day, he felt his strength failing,~his 8 VI | unconsciously, the General felt flattered by this nonsense. ~ 9 VI | rank of life that has not felt indefinable~rapture in his 10 VI | mere acquaintance in whom I~felt but slight interest, I should 11 VI | inspired? Armand had already felt that it would be absurd 12 VI | as for the love that he felt, must he not prove it? His 13 VI | boudoir. ~Even he himself felt that he had fallen so low 14 VI | his thoughts and views; he felt~nothing of the restraint 15 VI | Then Mme de Langeais felt afraid. The shrewd old noble' 16 VII | technically virtuous, that she~felt that there was not the slightest 17 VII | mistress. And she, if she felt the prick of fancy~stimulated 18 VII | with detestable motives, he felt something like shame as 19 VII | knew nothing whatever; she felt~nothing, and reflected over 20 VII | ignorant of theory, and felt~too much to reflect at all. 21 VIII| curls to his touch, and felt~the close pressure of his 22 VIII| to be a man for whom he felt a kind of repulsion whenever~ 23 VIII| see me? Would you not have~felt a something stir in your 24 VIII| visible."~ ~Then Montriveau felt the hardness of a woman 25 VIII| it~seemed to her that she felt the touch of the implacable 26 VIII| at her ease. The Duchess felt~that she was under the lion' 27 VIII| and suddenly the woman felt a cold~perspiration break 28 VIII| utter inability to move; she felt~as if she were turned to 29 VIII| stare. However curious she felt, the heat in Armand's~words 30 IX | were prophesying evil, I~felt convinced that there was 31 IX | murmured in his ear. "I felt a longing that I cannot 32 IX | should be a great man. As I felt~conscious of my height, 33 IX | less I cared to descend. I felt I~could trust you, I saw 34 IX | open my eyes."~ ~Armand felt sure of her after that cry. 35 IX | narrow, for as she went she~felt that his hand protected 36 IX | accident; but even there she felt a change in herself, a~new 37 IX | no longer. And then she felt the loneliness of the~luxurious 38 IX | was loved in return, she felt glad at heart to~say to 39 IX | reasons for his delay. Armand felt~embarrassed; the reply would 40 IX | irony? Then Mme de Langeais felt~the horror of the woman' 41 IX | shallowness, and the repugnance felt by men of~ability for bartering 42 X | in His name. You have but felt fleeting desires, while~ 43 X | never in his life had he felt such enthralling bliss,


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