Chapter
1 II | towards the door, but she turned~back.~ ~"Mother," she said,
2 III | veneration that the whole quarter~turned out in a body to follow
3 IV | when~people's heads were turned with distinctions, and art
4 IV | Napoleon used; they should have turned themselves inside out to~
5 IV | prudish and bigoted Court turned full upon the~Duchess, his
6 V | evening's space. All eyes were turned on her when she~entered
7 V | perpetual enjoyment, which turned her head. She was daring~
8 V | feeling almost like dread, she turned to Mme de Maufrigneuse~with, "
9 VI | of great importance, he turned his~attention to that unexplored
10 VI | Montriveau saw nothing, he turned his failing eyes upon his~
11 VI | to~complete repose. She turned to M. de Montriveau, from
12 VI | her chamber. Montriveau turned, saw her~flit like a shadow
13 VI | footman. Her long, blue eyes turned timidly to Armand; and by~
14 VII | next day."~ ~The General turned abruptly from her and went.
15 VIII| she felt~as if she were turned to stone. She lay passive
16 VIII| Montriveau's lurid face was turned upon her; she~could not
17 IX | YOU. I was weak;~you have turned all my weaknesses against
18 IX | than your fire!"~ ~Armand turned his head sharply away lest
19 IX | those two tears. When he turned round again to help her
20 IX | encyclopaedist. But his brother turned the relationship to good~
21 IX | And," she~added, as she turned to greet the Vidame and
22 X | made public, and~now are turned against our good Louis XV,
23 X | then her faith ebbed. She turned to leave the fatal~threshold.~ ~"
24 X | spite of all his firmness, turned pale at those~few words.
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