Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library
Alphabetical    [«  »]
combinations 3
combined 2
combining 2
come 183
comedian 1
comedie 1
comedies 1
Frequency    [«  »]
185 going
185 nohant
185 without
183 come
181 people
179 any
179 here
Gustave Flaubert
The George Sand-Gustave Flaubert letters

IntraText - Concordances

come

    Letter
1 Introd | pressFlaubert urges her to come out openly in renunciation 2 Introd | recognizing things any more. Come now! Cry out! Thunder! Take 3 IV | that lady when she made me come to my senses and repent 4 V | Silvanit also that she can come notwithstanding for education 5 VI | good weather to ask you to come to dine at Palaiseau with 6 VI | not worth the trouble to come to the country to catch 7 VII | do try to find time to come tomorrow Thursday. You will 8 VII | who is also going away.~Do come to see my hermitage and 9 VII | one’s self.~If you can not come—I shall have a thousand 10 IX | a good friend and try to come! I embrace you with all 11 X | out, I dont want you to come and find the door shut and 12 X | door shut and me far away. Come at six oclock and dine 13 XVIII | impression? Whence do we come and whither do we go? All 14 XVIII | is lovely. When will you come here?~ 15 XXI | strength and would say to you: “Come let’s go to Carthage or 16 XXI | and, if I can, I shall come back in a dream to tell 17 XXII | for I think that you will come for the first performance. 18 XXIV | a civil case which will come up at Rouen in a few days. 19 XXVII | Maurice Sand.] play would come next. And, for nothing in 20 XXVII | are ignorant of. That will come later, I am sure of it.~ 21 XXXI | themselves there to die, they come near the lamp, they are 22 XXXII | am the same here.~Whence come these attacks of melancholy 23 XXXII | as to find a word. Ideas come very easily with you, incessantly, 24 XXXV | self in every direction? Come, not all at the same time, 25 XXXV | cut out what ought not to come down front stage. Can’t 26 XXXVI | who knows me well having come to see me in his youth he 27 XLII | halting-place. Will you come into the land, of my dreams, 28 XLIV | friends are urging me to come. But I can not yet mention 29 XLVI | Paris next month, wont you come to see me here? Certainly, 30 XLVII | any other intimate friend. Come, dont stand on ceremony!~ 31 XLVIII | While writing to you it has come back to me that there is 32 XLVIII | other and then you shall come to Nohant this summer. It 33 LIV | desire absolutely that you come to our house this year, 34 LV | left of it, but it might come on again. She is anxious 35 LVI | pebbles, and if I aspire to come out from my misery, it is 36 LVIII | seems to me that idols will come out of the earth. We are 37 LIX | buried in work, we shall only come and go. It is so near to 38 LX | sight to see if they would come to ask me something or to 39 LXI | you which would tell me to come and embrace you. But you 40 LXI | If your heart told you to come here, there would be feasting 41 LXII | not be a Norman, you must come and see us for several days, 42 LXV | it be inconvenient if I come to see you? I am sick with 43 LXVII | Where do you think I have come from? From Normandy. A charming 44 LXIX | you are going to be free, come to see me here! You promised, 45 LXIX | one neglects or ignores.~Come, a little courage; you can 46 LXXI | nice would be for us to come back to Croisset together. 47 LXXII | with you for not wanting to come to Nohant; I wont reproach 48 LXXIII | inanities which burden us today come from that among other things.~ 49 XC | shall advise you. I have come to spend the days of respite 50 XCIV | that will be a happy day. Come to see me the night before, 51 XCIV | before, or even the same day. Come to dine with me the night 52 XCVI | excitement, and if it does not come, I say, “So much the worse,” 53 XCVIII | in the family. You must come, Maurice wants you to, and 54 CV | To conclude, you swear to come this summer and we count 55 CV | Sooner than not have you come I shall go to drag you here 56 CVII | suffering dog made tears come to his eyes. He did his 57 CVIII | my nephews and friends come to spend two out of every 58 CX | little ill. Lina’s mother has come to get into touch with her 59 CXII | first day that you are free, come to dine with your old troubadour 60 CXVII | dislike. You would much better come to Magny’s where you would 61 CXVIII | You would be very kind to come to read at my house, we 62 CXXIII | and you have promised to come. We dont forget it, we 63 CXXIII | me, our letters crossed.~Come to see us, my dear old friend, 64 CXXV | through Paris. If you want to come around with me,—oh! but 65 CXXVI | They wrote me yesterday to come because they wanted me at 66 CXXVII | written to the big Marchal to come to Magny’s too.~Your troubadour~ 67 CXXVIII | Lina or Maurice does not come to Paris, as they have a 68 CXXIX | beginning, your play was to come after Aisse; then it was 69 CXXIX | was agreed that it should come BEFORE. Now Chilly and Duquesnel 70 CXXIX | and Duquesnel want it to come after, simply and solely “ 71 CXXX | turn to Aisse. I was not to come till March. I went back 72 CXXXII | say farewell. If you can come, I shall be very happy and 73 CXXXII | going to make you ill, dont come, I know very well that you 74 CXXXIII | furious, and you will say: “Come weal, come woe!” I am also 75 CXXXIII | you will say: “Come weal, come woe!” I am also correcting 76 CXXXIII | impatient, you have promised to come as soon as you are free, 77 CXL | expecting him. If you can’t come with him, come at least 78 CXL | you can’t come with him, come at least for the Christmas 79 CXLI | writes us that YOU PROMISE to come the 24th. Do come the 23d 80 CXLI | PROMISE to come the 24th. Do come the 23d in the evening, 81 CXLI | the same.~If you did not come, we should be unhappy and 82 CXLII | So women are in it too? Come, forget that persecution 83 CXLII | literary life, or rather come be glad of it, for these 84 CXLII | and I beg you again not to come Christmas Eve, but the night 85 CXLIV | good book. Justice will come later, JUSTICE IS ALWAYS 86 CXLIV | DONE. Apparently it did not come at the right moment, or 87 CXLIV | made them sad. They did not come across themselves in it, 88 CXLV | think of these gentlemen who come to confer armed with pistols 89 CXLV | without any constraint. Come what may!~ 90 CXLVI | I leave Tuesday morning. Come to dine with me at Magny’ 91 CXLVII | this evening, I told him to come to dine with us both on 92 CXLVIII | Simonnet)~I dont see you, you come to the Odeon and when they 93 CXLVIII | a day then when you will come to eat a chop with me. Your 94 CLI | have a moment free, and come to the Odeon that night, 95 CLII | sorrows! Do you want to come to Nohant with me, for a 96 CLIV | containing these words: “Come to me, urgent business.” 97 CLV | being PATIENT, nothing else. Come, dear troubadour, you must 98 CLVII | himself in Homais, wanted to come to my house to box my ears. 99 CLVII | enough of this. I shall come to see you one of these 100 CLXIV | except what is not myself.~Come, you, your health first? 101 CLXVIII | relatives’. He has promised to come here the end of this month. 102 CLXIX | speak to him.~He did not come, I have waited for him, 103 CLXIX | to sleep ON A WARM BEACH. Come here, you will not have 104 CLXIX | Paris in August, you must come to spend several days with 105 CLXXI | MUCH of Pascal; when will come the MORE THAN EVER!~It is 106 CLXXI | barbarous stupidity! The wolves come and walk into our court, 107 CLXXII | back for a long time to come.~Are the wars between races 108 CLXXVIII | buck up. Call to them: “Come to help me prevent the enemy 109 CLXXX | to go at it.~So we have come back to the friends who 110 CLXXXII | pestilential for some time to come.~Yours.~ 111 CLXXXIV | them back again.~Now, do come to us, we are so quiet here; 112 CLXXXIV | possible. All our children have come out of the war safe and 113 CLXXXV | imbecility. Has the end come to the HUMBUGS? Will they 114 CLXXXVII | again there, peace will come to your spirit. As for me, 115 CLXXXVIII | again on the railroad, do come to see me for a little while. 116 CLXXXVIII | reasonable thing (I always come back to that) is a government 117 CLXXXIX | you than now. I have just come from Paris and I dont know 118 CXC | courage to go there. Do come to see me before you return 119 CXCI | would be very kind of you to come after him, dear master. 120 CXCI | him, dear master. I say come after, for we have only 121 CXCI | visit of the Prussians. Come, make a good effort. Come 122 CXCI | Come, make a good effort. Come in September.~Have you any 123 CXCII | you need me, and you dont come see me! That is not nice; 124 CXCV | recognizing things any more. Come now! Cry out! Thunder! Take 125 CXCVI | home. You absolutely must come to see me with Tourgueneff, 126 CXCVII | are bourgeois, if we have come from the serf, and from 127 CXCVIII | for expressing themselves.~Come, let me suffer! That is 128 CCII | impulse? Why didnt you come this autumn? You should 129 CCIV | princess was. She was to have come to get settled in Paris, 130 CCVIII | morning: “Tell Flaubert to come, I will take a vacation 131 CCVIII | You are too much alone. Come quickly to our house and 132 CCXVI | my pessimism, we have not come to that! However, if one 133 CCXVII | hope that we are going to come to life again without new 134 CCXX | to hour. She wanted me to come home although the painters 135 CCXXIV | shall write to you, you must come to see me in Paris, or I 136 CCXXVII | But next week will you come? I should like to go to 137 CCXXVIII | finished. However, dont come if your cough continues. 138 CCXXIX | or the 16th. If you could come next Thursday, the 13th, 139 CCXXXIII | to me. Why shouldnt you come to us in September? I shall 140 CCXXXV | Tourgueneff too, wont you come also? it would be so nice 141 CCXXXVI | you ask me to make tulips come from them when they can 142 CCXXXVIII | being loved. Why didnt you come to us with Madame Viardot 143 CCXLI | melancholy periods, and I have come out all right. Everything 144 CCXLII | anything to jolt yourself. Come, then, to read Saint-Antoine 145 CCXLII | for a man? If you wont come when we are gay and having 146 CCXLII | gay and having a holiday, come while it is quiet an I am 147 CCXLIV | that with you; will you come? or wait until my trip to 148 CCXLV | years old.~If you are not to come to Paris in February, I 149 CCXLVI | true joys.~You promise to come; that is a joy and a feast 150 CCXLVIII | my old friend, you must come to see me. I am not thinking 151 CCXLIX | I am undertaking? I have come to Paris this winter with 152 CCL | myself, because you will come and because I am hungry 153 CCLII | more those who were left? Come, so that I may OVERWHELM 154 CCLII | yonder in your lovely house. Come and work, at our house; 155 CCLIV | on very well. We havent come to that yet.~That FETID 156 CCLIV | be satisfied with it.~Do come with the swallows and bring 157 CCLV | hope that the general will come with you, if there is any 158 CCLXI | As for me, I have just come from Auvergne with my whole 159 CCLXX | wait until the said Sam had come down to under fifteen hundred 160 CCLXXIV | performance when I saw Delannoy come back into the wings with 161 CCLXXVII | for the reaction, it will come for you, and a splendid 162 CCLXXVII | beauty and grandeur! Try to come to see us before going to 163 CCLXXIX | to me you never want to come!~ 164 CCLXXXI | of forgetting Cruchard! Come now, I have, first of all, 165 CCLXXXII | are going, I am all right, come what may! But one needs 166 CCLXXXIII | are in Paris, wont you come to keep the Christmas Eve 167 CCLXXXVI | my serenity; it does not come from my depths, it comes 168 CCLXXXVI | and small join with me.~Come now, no weakness! We all 169 CCLXXXVII | every day, I exercise, and I come home tired, and still more 170 CCLXXXVIII| sure that a moment would come when someone would prescribe 171 CCXC | price of walking!~Wont you come to see us? Whether you are 172 CCXCI | million pounds. My niece will come to spend all the month of 173 CCXCII | the move. If you wanted to come to dine with us Friday at 174 CCXCIII | FLAUBERT~Friend, I shall come at your call as soon as 175 CCXCIV | the misfortune which has come to your niece. Is it then 176 CCXCIV | sure that better days will come and tell them so continually, 177 CCXCIV | sadness amidst your spleen.~Come, dear splendid old fellow, 178 CCXCVI | you. Tell us that calm has come and that the horizon has 179 CCXCVII | Well, well, your health has come back in spite of you, since 180 CCCII | that book are feeble and come to nothing, except those 181 CCCV | All your friends who had come at your summons were sorry 182 CCCXVII | business is finished, why not come to Paris for some time? 183 CCCXIX | fellow, when you wish to come there, you will be welcome.


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