1827-turni | twent-youth
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501 19| it had been abandoned for twenty years. The open gate was 502 57| how, those icy locks. I twisted, knotted, and unknotted, 503 54| Her hair, unbound, very long and very black, 504 11| and preoccupied, as though undergoing some mysterious mental struggle.~ 505 45| has not experienced it can understand that frightful, unreasoning 506 6| exhausted. He apparently understood my surprise, and he told 507 60| victim of a hallucination. Undoubtedly I had had one of those incomprehensible 508 18| I should thereby display undue susceptibility. My friend 509 7| where he lived, alone and unhappy, so sad and wretched that 510 57| I twisted, knotted, and unknotted, and braided them. She sighed, 511 39| disagreeable, musty odor of closed, unoccupied rooms. As my eyes slowly 512 45| understand that frightful, unreasoning terror! The mind becomes 513 8| some papers of which I have urgent need. I cannot send a servant 514 | us 515 41| growing irritated over my useless efforts and could now see 516 43| a long and painful sigh, uttered just at my shoulder, made 517 46| voice that set my nerves vibrating. I dare not say that I became 518 60| myself if I were not the victim of a hallucination. Undoubtedly 519 17| heart at being alive and vigorous on such a radiant day.~ 520 2| Sudden noises startle me violently, and objects imperfectly 521 60| to believe I had seen a vision, had a hallucination, when, 522 60| of mind that give rise to visions and are the stronghold of 523 11| him; the thought of the visit I was about to make to that 524 29| you will be kind enough to wait five minutes I will go and -- 525 61| was still absent. After waiting a week longer without news 526 5| Rouen. One day as I was walking along the quay I met a man 527 19| falling from its hinges, the walks were overgrown with grass 528 48| I wanted to reply, but it was impossible 529 17| The weather was glorious, and I trotted 530 61| absent. After waiting a week longer without news of him, 531 61| the slightest trace of his whereabouts or manner of disappearance 532 38| occupied by this man and his wife. I then crossed a large 533 61| friend that day, and I also wished to reflect more fully upon 534 48| impossible for me to pronounce a word. Only a vague sound came 535 8| key of my desk, also a few words for my gardener, telling 536 14| I was wounded at that remark and told 537 7| and unhappy, so sad and wretched that he thought constantly 538 41| light, and went over to the writing desk.~ 539 7| married her, but after a year of more than earthly happiness 540 7| fallen madly in love with a young girl, he had married her, 541 6| been deeply attached as a youth. For five years I had not


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