Part, Chapter
1 I,IV | augured evil; she wished~the walls were less high, the rooms
2 I,IV | in or under the plastered walls of~the strange unhealthy
3 I,IV | all four sides by the high walls of its~houses, has no life
4 I,IV | porcelain stove; on the walls, which were covered~with
5 I,V | put on with gilt nails,~walls hung with an olive-green
6 I,VI | dirty business upon the walls, in~the court, in the store-rooms.
7 I,VI | most of them broken, the walls yellow, and as~bare as those
8 I,VI | and surrounded by high walls, to which perpetual~dampness,
9 I,VI | bedrooms had a chimney, all the~walls were without paper, and
10 I,VI | fifteen-sous paper on the walls of these~horrible rooms,
11 I,VI | be no discussion. These walls seem to me very~damp, my
12 I,VII| and white marble, with its walls painted to~resemble marble,
13 I,VII| reigns between the wainscots, walls, cornices, and the~decorations;
14 I,VII| and tortoise-shell; the walls were hung~with purple stuff,
15 I,II | scarlet placards on all~the walls, and his eyes encountered
16 I,II | now flaunted on~all the walls and all the shop-fronts.
17 I,V | flowers, which~had been on the walls for twenty-five years; and
18 I,VII| he crept along beside the walls, like a thief.~ ~"Your conduct
19 I,VII| France is linked~to those walls. The stairway should therefore
|