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| Honoré de Balzac Albert Savarus IntraText - Concordances (Hapax - words occurring once) |
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1503 II | smallest. No stranger, no intruder, ever~finds his way into
1504 XVIII | I love you! Alas! I have intrusted too much to~my love and
1505 VIII | heard said, Rosalie had by intuition conceived~a notion of it
1506 XIX | strong wall, to protect from inundation~the two lateral valleys
1507 XVII | conquests I have just~added an invaluable one: I have done a service
1508 I | by an Englishwoman, were invented in London, it is~known why,
1509 XVIII | without hair. Not being inventive by~nature, and in sheer
1510 XVI | necessary capital for this investment. If I~should die, if I should
1511 XVI | prevent my accepting any invitations. I~am only to be consulted
1512 XIII | in the Colonna~family was invoked, to obtain permission from
1513 XI | never make me utter, even involuntarily, a wish to find~myself free.~ ~"
1514 XVII | tumult in his brain,~such inward qualms in his body as I
1515 VII | periwinkles would grow, iris, clematis, ivy,~honeysuckle,
1516 II | smartly--a short tunic-coat of iron-gray cloth, belted with~patent
1517 IV | wheels with six spokes out~of iron-wood, and manufactured snuff-boxes
1518 XIV | the appearance of~scathing irony, and which set Rodolphe'
1519 II | board, more prudent, or more irreproachable, for he~punctually attended
1520 XXII | before that decision is irrevocable," said the~lawyer, "I think
1521 XIX | a lovely little~river to irrigate the barren, uncultivated
1522 XIX | channel for the river and the~irrigation canals.~ ~When the Baron
1523 X | is still hope. My husband is--"~ ~"Eighty?" Rodolphe put
1524 XXVI | Wattevilles was buried on an island in the lake at les~Rouxey,
1525 IX | gardeners of the~Borromean Islands, whom he regarded as the
1526 XXIV | question and direct the~issue.~ ~"If the Elder Branch
1527 XXIV | do not let such~serious issues turn on such a trifle. The
1528 XXI | that elapses between the issuing of the writs for convening
1529 XII | education--an~unheard-of thing in Italy--I should have been obliged
1530 IV | IV~She habitually wore simple
1531 XVIII | embrace in my gaze that ivory skin,~glistening under the
1532 VII | would grow, iris, clematis, ivy,~honeysuckle, and Virginia
1533 IX | IX~For a hundred francs a month
1534 XXV | hundred and forty votes.~ ~"Jack is gone by the way he came,"
1535 X | pointing to the yellow jasmine~which covered the balustrade, "
1536 XIII | intelligible, "To the Villa~Jeanrenaud--to Prince Gandolphini's."~ ~
1537 XIII | At a few yards from the Jeanrenauds' house, which he was approaching~
1538 I | Portsmouth. They~were at first so jeered at that the first Englishwoman
1539 III | through the sieve of an old Jesuit? Dancing~and music were
1540 IV | phrases as are wrongly called Jesuitical--wrongly, because the~Jesuits
1541 IV | Jesuitical--wrongly, because the~Jesuits were strong, and such reservations
1542 II | such as perfumery, cravats, jewelry,~patent blacking, and clothes,
1543 I | the garden of his house~joins on to yours."~ ~"But he
1544 XX | If you wish to secure the joint possession of the~Dent de
1545 XVIII | Ah! I have received your journal. Thanks for your punctuality.--~
1546 XII | watching it~attentively, gave a joyful start, though faithful to
1547 VIII | by this work must~not be judged by ordinary rules. Without
1548 XXII | present who was~capable of judging of Savarus (he has since
1549 III | saved and invested with the judgment that distinguishes~those
1550 VIII | so kind. Therefore, the~judicious mother had encouraged the
1551 XXI | conviction to the Government of July--in~short, one of those men
1552 XV | the safest. I can see you jump~with surprise in your lawyer'
1553 VI | met with, Rosalie at once jumped at the idea of~getting into
1554 XX | the Dent de~Vilard, the Jungfrau of that little Switzerland.~ ~"
1555 XXVII | Albert must still hope for justification."~ ~Rosalie promised to
1556 XIII | were full of cheerfulness,~justified, indeed, by the relief of
1557 XIII | joy!"~ ~He blamed himself, justifying this girl-wife.~ ~"She has
1558 IV | The Baroness kept all the keener watch over her daughter,
1559 V | said the Abbe, looking~keenly at the lady who had interrupted
1560 II | meet in the year~with a keenness and skill which would have
1561 XXVII | detail as though I were the keeper of your conscience, asking
1562 XXIV | suddenly turn as~white as her kerchief.~ ~"She recognizes the writing,"
1563 XXVIII| best society. The~golden key--eighteen hundred thousand
1564 XXVII | Albert?~Has he, perhaps, killed himself? There was tremendous
1565 X | patriots do not play at killing!" said Rodolphe to himself
1566 XXII | immediate effect.~Reflection kills the word when the word ceases
1567 XXVIII| the girl making a show of~kindness and sweetness to her mother.
1568 XXVII | spiritual director; you are not~kneeling at the feet of God; I am
1569 XVII | herself by remaining on her knees, her arms outstretched for~
1570 XVIII | wear? If your lofty brow is~knit? If our writers amuse you?
1571 V | did not go in, but merely~knocked at the door.~ ~"The third
1572 VII | Commercial Tribunal in~three knotty cases which had to be carried
1573 III | absolutely nothing. Is it knowledge to have learned geography
1574 IV | the republicans; but she~labored in vain. Rosalie showed
1575 VI | gloomy,~unhappy, eloquent, laborious, as compared by Mademoiselle
1576 XIII | too soon in your ambitious labors. Remain young. They say~
1577 VI | coming and going in the labyrinth of her~meditations, she
1578 XIII | servant blazing with gold lace stood behind. Francesca
1579 II | a shiny hat with black lacing, and brass buttons~with
1580 XII | feelings crave, for it is never lacking to religious sentiment;
1581 XIV | dreamed of descending by a ladder from the kiosk into the
1582 XX | Baron called two gardener lads who knew how to row, and
1583 XV | doubt forwarded to Albert's~lady-love.~ ~"Oh!" said she to herself,
1584 XIII | Diodati and that of Monsieur Lafin-de-Dieu, let to the Vicomtesse de~
1585 XV | Wattevilles'~house, he had laid siege systematically to
1586 XI | the Rigi,~and this superb lake--"~ ~"I want to know," said
1587 XXVI | of the Baron as "her dear lamb!"~ ~The last of the Wattevilles
1588 IX | singing~ceased, Rodolphe landed and sent away the boat and
1589 XIV | steps leading down to a landing-stage. From the~neighboring villa,
1590 XIII | first care was to~ask his landlord, a retired jeweler, whether
1591 XIII | Gandolphini, one of the richest landowners in Sicily; and Francesca~
1592 XXVIII| thousand francs from her own~lands, and was quite incapable
1593 XIII | that, besides five living languages, Francesca knew~Greek, Latin,
1594 XVII | days when I feel~a heady languor; deep disgust surges up
1595 XX | with no title-deed~but lapse of time. And, therefore,
1596 XIX | were caught in the firs and larches, rolling up and along~the
1597 VI | by advising him to turn~larger pieces, columns. After persuading
1598 XV | husband, who~has one of the largest fortunes in Lombardy. Their
1599 II | costing ten francs,~and lasting three months, four waistcoats
1600 XIII | refugees~from Milan had not lately come to reside at Geneva.~ ~"
1601 III | this~display of folly and latent prudence, had an object,
1602 XIX | from inundation~the two lateral valleys opening into the
1603 XIII | languages, Francesca knew~Greek, Latin, and Hebrew. The charming
1604 XXI | fully understood~how much latitude Albert's absorbed state
1605 XIX | His disinterestedness was lauded, and he~took his clients'
1606 XX | in which he seemed~to be laughing at the young athlete's uncompromising
1607 XIII | key to her character; she laughs and~she is touched; she
1608 IV | yielding, as the seething lavas~within a hill before it
1609 XVII | perishes, perhaps, of a too lavish effusion of its essence?
1610 XVI | business, you were made law-clerk to the Maire of your~district,
1611 XX | dragged my father into a lawsuit--I would have done~anything
1612 XIX | of the citizens, it~would lead to considerable outlay;
1613 XXVIII| of les Rouxey, where she leads a life wholly devoted to~
1614 X | able to come again---"~ ~He leaned against one of the gate-posts
1615 XXVI | understood that there was a~leaven of spite in her daughter.
1616 XXIV | alive by the Puritans of the Left--who~do worse--and blamed
1617 XXVIII| her~right arm and her left leg; her face is marked with
1618 XXVIII| Watteville had been declared legally of age; she was,~in fact,
1619 XIII | but which were sometimes legible in his countenance, and~
1620 XV | though indeed I am~neither legitimate nor legitimized."~ ~"Ah!
1621 XV | am~neither legitimate nor legitimized."~ ~"Ah! I knew it! He is
1622 V | Girardet is long-winded, I had leisure to study the stranger. He~
1623 VIII | me~read it, but you will lend it to me."~ ~Monsieur de
1624 XXIV | Chavoncourt.~ ~ ~"She is very lenient to Monsieur de Savarus,"
1625 XI | subtle, like what the~great Leonardo has so well depicted in
1626 XV | from it the most dangerous lesson that can be given, that
1627 XXII | and clasped him~closely, letting his head fall on the old
1628 III | never read anything but the /Lettres edifiantes/~and some works
1629 I | since it has vanquished Liberalism in the person of the~Counsel
1630 XXVIII| intentions,~was touched by this liberality, and made her a present
1631 XII | the last letter.~ ~"/La liberta/!" she exclaimed, with an
1632 XX | the~supreme interests that lie beyond my election."~ ~The
1633 XXII | by him and fought by his lieutenants--a~battle of words, speeches,
1634 IX | men experience in a whole lifetime.~ ~After dressing himself
1635 VII | new blood in her feet, she lifted them as though she trod
1636 XVIII | flash of inspiration which lifts the poet above mankind.
1637 XIII | of deep feeling with the~lightness of youth added an enchanting
1638 XIII | can only be compared to a~lightning flash. But to what could
1639 VII | brown, shot with golden~lights, covered ardor which revealed
1640 | likely
1641 III | young man who bore some likeness to them.~ ~All this hidden
1642 XX | our~intentions are. Amedee likes you, and you will not be
1643 XX | your prospects on a woman's liking, any more~than a wise man
1644 XXI | XXI~Rosalie, as white as a lily, made no reply, so completely
1645 IX | side of which~ran a long lime avenue in the Bergmanns'
1646 IV | not overstepped its due limits. Being a friend of the family,~
1647 XXII | dying, his hands hanging limp, in a forlorn attitude~worthy
1648 II | his hair curled and a fine linen shirt into the bargain?~ ~
1649 III | incomprehensible philosophical lingo. His success was complete.~ ~
1650 XIII | epitome of the~past and as a link with the future. A hundred
1651 XXV | Rosalie put her finger to her lip.~ ~"I ask you to be as secret
1652 X | voluptuous glance of her liquid eyes of velvety blackness.~
1653 XI | village, there was no fear of listeners; Rodolphe took Gina into
1654 XVII | the trials,~call on the litigious merchants, and conduct the /
1655 I | in harmony with the old liveries and the old servants. Though~
1656 XXIV | this moment a servant in livery brought in a letter for
1657 XIII | of happy moments in our lives--he who had~such a living
1658 XX | after~inspection of the localities," said the Vicar-General.~ ~"
1659 XXV | shown in. As he himself locked the door, it is impossible
1660 X | first time since he had~lodged with the Bergmanns the old
1661 XIII | Rodolphe heard that the lodgers at the Bergmanns' had left
1662 V | this mysterious~personage lodges; then, of course, there
1663 XIII | capricious~beauty of Bergmanns' lodgings. The intoxication of such
1664 X | piercing his side, fell like a log.~ ~"/Nel lago con pietra/!"
1665 VI | clear-seeing,~as swift and as logical as that of a savage, at
1666 XXVIII| she~happened to be on the Loire in a steamboat of which
1667 V | worthy Monsieur~Girardet is long-winded, I had leisure to study
1668 XIII | than in the intermediate loops of rings. This~recognition
1669 XVII | show his gratitude without loosening his purse-strings by saying~
1670 IX | lady, thanks to his hosts' loquacity; for they were ready to
1671 XVI | must know that I am a great loser by putting~myself forward
1672 XXV | pack; no doubt he wrote a~lot of letters; finally, he
1673 XXVI | she was interrupted by a loud cry~from two of the gardeners,
1674 IX | Swiss fashion. Rodolphe had~loudly praised the elegance of
1675 XXVI | grew near--her name was Louise--the Vicar-~General came
1676 VII | the~Jura, Bourg, Nantua, Lous-le-Saulnier. The concurrence was invited
1677 XIII | pleasures of~vanity? What lout but would then become an
1678 XI | you as you desire to be loved--is not that enough to make
1679 IX | This name (pronounced~/Loveless/) is that of an old English
1680 VIII | valleys whose beauty seems the lovelier in~the dreamy distance.~ ~
1681 XX | flowerbeds and make the loveliest English gardens. Let us
1682 XIV | so far, the protection of luck--the god of fools--has been~
1683 I | England, is a tune~written by Lulli for the Chorus of Esther
1684 XII | fount of life, the secret luminary of all your least thoughts!--
1685 XVIII | me solitude is~like the lump of amber in whose heart
1686 Add | Jeanrenaud~The Commission in Lunacy~ ~Nueil, Gaston de~The Deserted
1687 XI | work amply supplies our luxuries," she replied in~a grave
1688 VII | meet between Mulhouse and Lyons, and the chief centre between
1689 XV | necessary wheel in the political~machine, I committed the blunder
1690 VII | Perhaps~remarks may be made--"~ ~"Do you presume, Rosalie,
1691 XXVIII| obstinate hand of a young girl~madly bent on being loved, or
1692 I | devoted to the~study of madness, regard this tendency towards
1693 IX | of Isola Bella and Isola Madre in the Lago Maggoire. These~
1694 XXII | forlorn attitude~worthy of the Magdalen. Tears hung on his long
1695 IX | Isola Madre in the Lago Maggoire. These~Swiss, who were possessed
1696 XII | any second~thought. This magnanimity struck Rodolphe greatly,
1697 XIII | glance at the~door, as though magnetized by this current of love,
1698 I | not devoid of a certain magnificence worthy~of Louis XIV., and
1699 XVI | to bid you good-bye. The mail coach dropped~me at Besancon,
1700 IV | narrative, "one fine morning the mail-~coach dropped at the Hotel
1701 XVI | fills it wholly, who is the mainspring of my~efforts, the secret
1702 XX | belongs to his district, and maintains~that a hundred years ago,
1703 IV | stranger went~straight to the Mairie, and had himself registered
1704 II | dans Barcelone~ ~C'est ma maitresse et ma lionne.~ ~There has
1705 XIX | suffrages of one of the makers of~Besancon, a rich contractor,
1706 XXII | silencing beforehand the malignant~talk to which his early
1707 XVI | I engaged an~intelligent man-servant, and there I sat for five
1708 XVI | editorship of a paper under a~manager who did not know much about
1709 II | paraded Paris with his~mane, his beard and moustaches,
1710 III | go as Depute.~ ~All these manoeuvres were crowned with complete
1711 I | Prefecture in the fine old mansion of the Rupts, with an~immense
1712 IV | spokes out~of iron-wood, and manufactured snuff-boxes for everyone
1713 II | and the~perquisite of the manure. The two horses, treated
1714 V | brow; an olive~complexion marbled with red, a square nose,
1715 XXII | other~side.~ ~A criminal marching to execution could not suffer
1716 IV | imaginative faculty of the Marechal de Saxe, whose~natural granddaughter
1717 XXVIII| Opera ball on~Tuesday with a marigold in your hand."~ ~This anonymous
1718 XXVIII| her left leg; her face is marked with fearful scars,~which
1719 XVI | We used to say, 'They are marking time.' Now was this~sympathy?
1720 XVI | months like a~hibernating marmot.~ ~"My name had, however,
1721 III | her cheeks. A few freckles~marred the whiteness of her forehead,
1722 II | one thinks about them. The marriages in these~families are arranged
1723 XXIII | wealth.~Though Vauchelles marries the eldest without anything
1724 XII | Simplon; he came by sea, by Marseilles, and had to cross France.~
1725 VI | she had come across~the marvelous, the exceptional, which
1726 XIX | Rouxey, between two granite masses covered with pines, when
1727 XIV | depicted in it, if not by a master-~hand, at any rate by a man
1728 II | Talleyrand would gladly have mastered to use at a congress.~ ~
1729 XXVI | from her, Rosalie showed masterly~qualities, that she was
1730 II | Paris, which~devours as many masterpieces as absurdities, the provinces
1731 VI | girls can carry out such~masterstrokes of diplomacy, while, for
1732 XIII | one of the most brilliant matches in the~Papal States. Her
1733 XXVII | From the point of view of material~advantages, you have done
1734 III | allowed to talk more than the maternal rule permitted.~ ~At eighteen
1735 VIII | as a poet imagines, as a mathematician calculates, as a painter~
1736 XXI | Monsieur de Vauchelles had his matrimonial plans, as~Amedee had his;
1737 XX | she should hear that the Mayor of~Riceys, a republican,
1738 VIII | smiling and trimly kept meadows, forests crowning~perpendicular
1739 XXI | Chamber was sitting, she lived~meagrely in one of their country
1740 VIII | had recourse to a heroic measure.~She sold everything she
1741 XXIV | If we were known to have meddled in election~matters, we
1742 V | furrowed by the strong median line which great schemes,
1743 XXVI | hours later, with~the first medical aid from Besancon, they
1744 XIII | as the golden sand of the~Mediterranean lies beneath the waves.
1745 XVIII | the only adventure in my memory, and pitched it in the key
1746 XVII | direction blazed as the words /Mene/, /Tekel/,~/Upharsin/, did
1747 I | collecting as a first~~degree of mental aberration when it is set
1748 VI | that of a savage, at the mercy of an~accident. This inevitable
1749 V | Savaron came out in a black merino dressing-~gown tied with
1750 II | The /Incroyable/, the /Merveilleux/, the /Elegant/, the three~
1751 XVIII | hell and paradise.~ ~"/O mia cara diva/, keep up your
1752 XXII | insult! It is the Archangel~Michael, the angel of Execution,
1753 VII | came under discussion~that mid-winter at Madame de Chavoncourt'
1754 XXII | between eleven o'clock and midnight. At one in the~morning,
1755 XIV | sometimes as powerful as at midsummer. The two lovers happened
1756 XVIII | Is she ill?~Is /he/? I am midway between hell and paradise.~ ~"/
1757 Add | Government Clerks~Modeste Mignon~The Imaginary Mistress~The
1758 XXVIII| the ranks of the Church Militant, and I~lay the remains of
1759 XXV | could only be a prince or a /milord/."~ ~"Was there a coronet
1760 XX | Rouxey will some day be mine--not for a long time yet,
1761 XII | second birth? And a young man mingles with this love a little~
1762 XIII | of his heart; he felt her mingling with his blood as purer~
1763 XVIII | marble, in painting, in miniature, in every possible form,
1764 XXII | talking-to from a clever Ministerialist, who~proved to them that
1765 XXIV | one of the most faithful ministers under the Elder Branch,
1766 XXIV | the Government and upset Ministries!"~--"The Duc de Fitz-James
1767 XIII | name; I have for~the last minute been Princess Rodolphini."~ ~
1768 XXII | Provence to have~found a Mirabeau, to return the only statesman
1769 XXVII | do you know wherein the miracle lies? Virtue has a glory
1770 XIV | him--which~was almost a miracle--an original portrait for
1771 XXVII | Providence protects and saves--miraculously, we say!~But do you know
1772 IV | girl~as a dissembler. If by mischance a spark of the true nature
1773 XXII | did Savarus all the more mischief, because the wives~of some
1774 XIII | grandeur?" she asked, with a mischievous glance at Rodolphe and at
1775 VIII | take her place if by some misfortune she should be lost to her~
1776 X | the cordiality due to his~misfortunes and to his being a Frenchman,
1777 X | himself~as much older to mislead the police."~ ~"Dearest,"
1778 XIV | whether she might not~be mistaken, whether Albert really loved
1779 XIX | water, from which the light mists rose like~smoke, and were
1780 XXI | life, and thus you~will mitigate the effect of the discovery
1781 XI | without seeing what would have mitigated her agony--"~ ~"What?" said
1782 XIII | too deeply.' "~ ~ ~This mixture of dignity and banter, of
1783 XXII | decent~hustings, without the mob, but formidable; agitation,
1784 XI | also seemed to have a~mocking expression as she gave a
1785 III | same plump, though slender modeling, the~same delicacy saddened
1786 Add | Life~The Government Clerks~Modeste Mignon~The Imaginary Mistress~
1787 XIV | dignified movement of offended modesty,~and, standing a yard off,
1788 XVII | desire has only a certain modicum of power, and that it~perishes,
1789 XVII | his ears, such a~nervous moisture on his palms, such a fevered
1790 III | Amedee had worked like a mole to get into~the highest
1791 VI | explosion so well shown by Moliere in the character of~Agnes,
1792 XVI | have remained~faithful to monarchical opinions; but, as you have
1793 XXVIII| drove a clever man into a monastery--the Grand Chartreuse--a~
1794 XIII | excessively monotonous and almost monastic life she led~in the castle
1795 III | after dinner, excepting on Mondays and Fridays, she~accompanied
1796 III | disquisitions in the Revue des Deux Mondes, and you will~hardly reach
1797 XIII | thanks to the excessively monotonous and almost monastic life
1798 IV | Leave me to manage her,~monseigneur. I know her! She has more
1799 XII | Saint-Gothard, nor by the Mont-Cenis, nor by~the Simplon; he
1800 XIII | alternating with melancholy~moods, with tiffs and quarrels
1801 XVII | in a few days~reached a morbid and very dangerous stage
1802 IX | To whom does that little Moresco belong?" he asked worthy
1803 XX | would have committed any mortal sin, and you will not enter
1804 XVI | may lose nothing by this mortgage,~which is indispensable.~ ~
1805 III | that his farms were not mortgaged,~and that he had some savings.
1806 XXI | be named as candidate, a motion received with such enthusiasm~
1807 VIII | a guiding force and the motive power of his~whole being,
1808 XXII | All or~nothing' is the motto of this type of angel. There
1809 IX | watched~Leopold as he set out, moved by the spirit of routine,
1810 XXVI | pulled him~out, covered with mud, in which he had sunk; he
1811 III | moderate party, a member of the municipal council, sent for the~journalist
1812 VIII | everything she owed to the munificence of her child's father~for
1813 I | successful and illustrious of murderers and renegades--his~extraordinary
1814 VIII | a painter~sketches, as a musician creates melodies. Tender-hearted,
1815 IV | days she was~dressed in a muslin frock, her hair plainly
1816 II | famous song by Alfred de~Musset:~ ~Avez vou vu dans Barcelone~ ~
1817 XXI | win all, or, stung by a myriad darts, at a given moment~
1818 XXII | thought for which to blame myself--"~ ~"Ah! if you could only
1819 III | is only revealed in its mystical radiance to the~eyes of
1820 XII | hale, Rodolphe scented some mystification, and preserved the watchful~
1821 II | to his pretensions. His nails were well kept, his beard
1822 XIV | wanted to know her rival's name--for she too loved! As she
1823 XXVI | expeditions.~As the Baroness' name-day grew near--her name was
1824 | namely
1825 VII | Neufchatel, to the~Jura, Bourg, Nantua, Lous-le-Saulnier. The concurrence
1826 I | in~them at the Tuileries narrowly escaped being crushed by
1827 VI | problems--for the~future of a nation is in the mother--that the
1828 XXVI | Baroness' name-day grew near--her name was Louise--the
1829 XII | as a~mute. The bark came nearer; when at length Francesca
1830 XXVI | and the other to fetch the nearest doctor and~surgeon. When
1831 XVII | dear~and only friend, for nearly ten years now I have been
1832 XV | optics;~he saw in Mariette a neat figure; he did not perceive
1833 IX | relieved of all thought for~the necessaries of life. But, in consideration
1834 X | with a stone tied to~my neck."~ ~Next day he sent to
1835 IV | end he was aiming at, all neckcloths~set, and by dint of pots
1836 VI | All that day she drew her needle through her embroidery with
1837 III | came back to breakfast, did needlework after a little walk in~the
1838 XXVI | and Monsieur de Soulas, to negotiate a peace between mother~and
1839 XIV | landing-stage. From the~neighboring villa, where there is a
1840 XXII | French~with hard words. Our neighbors have a scrimmage, the French
1841 XIII | law Prince Gandolphini, a Neopolitan, or if you like, a Sicilian,
1842 IX | cook's name as a screen to net the little~profits of this
1843 III | plain sewing, embroidery, netting. At~seventeen Rosalie had
1844 XX | name shows, was a native of Neuchatel.~ ~"My dear father," said
1845 VI | congratulations offered by each~newcomer to the Abbe on having gained
1846 IV | young~Monsieur de Soulas /nice/, she would have drawn down
1847 XXI | god-~daughter and favorite niece. Consequently, young Chavoncourt
1848 XV | the handsomest.~ ~If the night-scene in the kiosk is thus fully
1849 IX | Schwytz, and came in at~nightfall. From afar he saw the window
1850 I | to be related~here--this nineteenth century Monsieur de Watteville
1851 VIII | woman, and a man of~mark, a nobleman of Brabant, was cursed with
1852 XI | you allow me to love you nobly, looking to heaven for the
1853 II | shame. As~to Victor Hugo, Nodier, Fourier, the glories of
1854 IX | end~of the walk to slip noiselessly to the other. After half
1855 XXI | service, and who was to nominate him as a~candidate; of Girardet
1856 XXIII | yourself that you regard the nomination as~deputy as a sufficient
1857 III | which the Baron's apparent nonentity gave some certainty.~ ~Mademoiselle
1858 XIII | Though I am far above the nonsense the world~talks, I do not
1859 II | dressed and went out towards noon, to go to one of~his farms
1860 XIV | de Beauseant; and she did not--"~ ~"Did not hesitate, you
1861 VIII | intending to stop at every notable spot on the lake of the~
1862 XVIII | to-day I can only~write you nothing--but that nothing is everything.
1863 XIII | that was jealous of mere nothings--already!~ ~"You care very
1864 XI | s~wife, going on without noticing this pantomime, which, however,
1865 XVIII | chant, like some divine nourishment, like everything which can~
1866 XXVIII| of~ ~"BROTHER ALBERT.~ ~"November 1836."~ ~ ~"Everything is
1867 XXVII | has renounced it. He is a novice in the~monastery of the
1868 XX | That was all I asked.~But now--now I mean to be your wife.--
1869 XXI | few years.~Eloquence is, nowadays, rarely in the pulpit; but
1870 | nowhere
1871 XXII | the eighty~votes--the real number--at the disposal of the Prefecture,
1872 IV | pigeon-holed, ticketed, and numbered, as in Besancon, Albert
1873 VIII | Review/, and lent the four numbers already out to his~daughter.
1874 XXVI | solemnized with great~splendor. Numerous entertainments given in
1875 VIII | in a boat pulled by three oarsmen. They started for~Fluelen,
1876 XX | to the election! take the oath?" cried the Baron de Watteville.~ ~"
1877 XXI | salutary~doctrine of taking the oaths and resisting the present
1878 II | rapidly in the direction of obesity, which would be~fatal to
1879 XIV | order was stern, but it was obeyed, for it was Francesca's
1880 XIV | conquer the great painter's objections; but~Francesca, no doubt,
1881 XXVIII| make me break the law of~oblivion I imposed on myself when
1882 XV | faithful and useful I~was as an obscure journalist, and how excellent
1883 VII | to the connections he had~obscurely formed among the upper class
1884 XIX | the wrong turning." This observation~struck Savarus.~ ~Rosalie,
1885 XI | fine~fortune. All these observations now recurred to his mind;
1886 VI | seeing ere long a charming~observatory built, whence her eye would
1887 IV | Physiologists and profound observers will tell you, perhaps~to
1888 XXVI | by her~to her daughter's obstinacy. She took an aversion for
1889 XXVIII| whether it be death, or the obstinate hand of a young girl~madly
1890 VI | her embroidery with the~obtuse concentration of a girl
1891 XI | glance at Rodolphe.~This obvious disagreement between the
1892 I | against that rock--/Rupt/ is obviously~derived from /rupes/. Scientific
1893 XXI | but it is found on~certain occasions in the Chamber of Deputies,
1894 XVII | to be~devoted to feminine occupations, and realized her mother'
1895 I | Monsieur de Watteville, who, to occupy his time and vary his~employments,
1896 XXVI | your daughter! It does not occur to you to~ask me if I am
1897 XXVI | final."~ ~"It has never occurred to you," said Madame de
1898 XXI | francs a year, was not~an offence to anybody, especially as
1899 XIV | a dignified movement of offended modesty,~and, standing a
1900 XVIII | them I was~sorely afraid of offending you. We had no stories,
1901 XXVIII| hunting, refusing two or three offers a year, going to~Besancon
1902 II | introduction~for the colonels or officers of title belonging to the
1903 III | editor from Paris for the official~newspaper, to enable it
1904 I | that Rosalie was the only offspring of the union~between the
1905 XXVI | up."~ ~"You eat like an ogre!"~ ~"Just so. But however
1906 X | disguised himself~as much older to mislead the police."~ ~"
1907 IV | of Savarus are one~of the oldest, noblest, and richest families
1908 XXVIII| was,~in fact, not far from one-and-twenty. Her mother, to settle with
1909 XXIII | Watteville will get the old ones. As to my~electors, they
1910 XIX | A lake fed by snows has opalescent colors and a translucency
1911 II | Rue Neuve, just where it opens into the Rue de~la Prefecture.~ ~
1912 XXVIII| about Albert, come to the Opera ball on~Tuesday with a marigold
1913 XXII | be Albert's most ardent~opponents in the hostile camp. Towards
1914 XVI | to secure for me at the opportune moment. Let us each~keep
1915 XXI | by my advice; you had the opportunity of making~an impression
1916 XX | when the candidates must oppose each other? It must then~
1917 XV | could alter the laws of optics;~he saw in Mariette a neat
1918 XVIII | To walk by the blossoming orange-trees, to live a few~months in
1919 XXV | before she died; then he ordered~post horses for six o'clock.
1920 IX | or at least of Sicilian, origin. The child had the~golden-brown
1921 XIV | was almost a miracle--an original portrait for Rodolphe, and
1922 XIX | October 1834 he had brought, ostensibly to serve a~merchant who
1923 | otherwise
1924 VII | looking-glass against the wall, an~ottoman forming a box, and a table
1925 XIII | betrayed into one of those~outbursts of conceit which come so
1926 V | he received me~in his outer room next the ante-room--
1927 IX | refugees," said he to himself, "outlaws in fear of~the Austrian
1928 XXVI | sorrow, which had no visible outlet; she accused~herself of
1929 XIX | You are working~beyond the outline," said the Baroness to her
1930 XXVI | Baron purchased various outlying~plots, and a little estate
1931 XVII | remaining on her knees, her arms outstretched for~hours, and repeating
1932 X | but just~discern the long, oval shape of her face, and a
1933 XIX | leaving two cuttings for the overflow. Above~this dam he made
1934 XVII | with the enthusiasm which overflows in~a youthful heart. Thus
1935 XVIII | accident which should sink that~overloaded bark would end my life.
1936 VIII | of his schemes, he always overlooked the means of~attainment. "
1937 XXII | when the word ceases to overpower~reflection. If the votes
1938 XI | which the expression may not~overstep the boundary of the heart,
1939 IV | through her mother~had not overstepped its due limits. Being a
1940 XIX | strength of~his terribly overstrung soul. His disinterestedness
1941 XXV | in the~next room, he was overtaken by Rosalie, who said:~ ~"
1942 XXVIII| wonderful woman, and~to overwhelm her with perennial remorse.
1943 XIII | Holy Alliance~~to which it owes its independence. /Our/
1944 XIX | lake above his dam he~was owner of the two hills, but not
1945 XXV | o'clock. He went home to pack; no doubt he wrote a~lot
1946 XXV | out again with an~immense package, four feet long, which looked
1947 XVI | Well, my dear Leopold, I packed up my books in eleven cases,
1948 XII | of~gold no doubt, and a packet of letters to Francesca,
1949 XXVII | the story~of the youthful page, falsely accused, and carrying
1950 III | saints, or those of the~painters before Perugino; the same
1951 X | appear fragile. An amber~paleness overspread her face, betraying
1952 XXV | papers.~Monsieur Savaron was paler than death, and he, so proud,
1953 VIII | recently~built, enclosed by a paling, and standing on a promontory,
1954 XIII | candles, had the brilliant pallor peculiar to Italians, and
1955 XVII | nervous moisture on his palms, such a fevered tumult in
1956 XI | on without noticing this pantomime, which, however, she~plainly
1957 XIII | brilliant matches in the~Papal States. Her elder sister
1958 II | So, as soon as the /lion/ paraded Paris with his~mane, his
1959 XVIII | midway between hell and paradise.~ ~"/O mia cara diva/, keep
1960 XXVI | pointing out the following paragraph under the date of~Florence,
1961 XXV | had in his hand a large parcel of papers.~Monsieur Savaron
1962 XV | smallpox had left on her flat, parched face; to~him the crooked
1963 XIII | which seemed to ask his pardon for having deceived him
1964 II | The /lion/ is not the parent of~the /lionne/. The /lionne/
1965 XV | through the lonely~places of Paris--Paris which had slipped
1966 XXII | 1788 I was in charge of a~parish. I know life.--I have refused
1967 III | and to be able to show any Parisians of~rank who visited the
1968 II | world is essentially of the~/parlement/, and arrogant, stiff, solemn,
1969 XXVI | silence was appalling. In a paroxysm of~repentance she felt that
1970 X | brilliant teeth between the parted lips, full, fresh, and~brightly
1971 XV | utter rascality of my two~partners, who combined to cheat and
1972 XIX | in his active old age was~passionately attached to this magnificent
1973 XV | instead of appealing to the passions of~the moment. I did not
1974 IV | parents to reduce Rosalie to~passive obedience.~ ~This covert
1975 VIII | lakes and rocks, brooks and~pastures, trees and torrents. Here
1976 X | look at you," said Rodolphe pathetically, "for it may be long~before
1977 XVIII | he still keeps well! My~patience is almost as great as my
1978 V | terrible and so gentle, patient and yet~impatient, broad
1979 XII | an amnesty. Oh! /la cara patria/!"~ ~These three words made
1980 III | great /Gazette/, and the /Patriot/, which~frisked in the hands
1981 V | of Saint Peter and Saint~Paul in pictures, with thick
1982 IX | residence and a month's payment in advance. Rub a Swiss
1983 I | Watteville was as gentle and~peaceable as his ancestor of the /
1984 XX | turn to his career on the~peaceful frontier of Switzerland,
1985 XVIII | Though~I work enormously, the peacefulness of the surroundings has
1986 XIII | already full, he added to it pearls of great price; smiles shed
1987 XIII | had the brilliant pallor peculiar to Italians, and which~looks
1988 III | are~easily struck by the peculiarities which attracted the attention
1989 XVII | her sin by self-imposed penances; she fasted, she~mortified
1990 XIV | my father has a dispute pending as to his~land at les Rouxey.
1991 V | resigned, and his voice~of penetrating sweetness, which surprised
1992 XIII | independent of a certain penetration. The young Frenchman~discerned
1993 XXVIII| 1830 for the benefit of~the pensioners on the old Civil List. A
1994 XXVI | called the tomb of Heloise at Pere-Lachaise.~ ~A month after this catastrophe
1995 XXVIII| and~to overwhelm her with perennial remorse. Rosalie gave herself
1996 XXVI | revealed in~them to such perfection. Rosalie, writing in Albert'
1997 XXII | But the Prefet's party had perfidiously made~thirty of its most
1998 XVIII | path like a light, like a perfume, like a steady~chant, like
1999 II | received from Paris, such as perfumery, cravats, jewelry,~patent
2000 XXI | depends on an election, the~period that elapses between the
2001 VII | more subscribers, and the periodical would pay a~dividend to
2002 XVII | modicum of power, and that it~perishes, perhaps, of a too lavish