Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library
Alphabetical    [«  »]
otherwise 15
ou 1
ouf 2
ought 94
our 223
ours 4
ourselves 49
Frequency    [«  »]
98 take
96 made
95 seems
94 ought
93 three
92 before
92 live
Gustave Flaubert
The George Sand-Gustave Flaubert letters

IntraText - Concordances

ought

   Letter
1 IV | those sentiments which she ought to understand. If you are 2 VII | very good for me. People ought to do that for each other 3 XVI | an explorer whom nothing ought to stop, and who does neither 4 XVI | but I still fancy that it ought to succeed at the Odeon 5 XXI | devil remains common. One ought to love common people more 6 XXVII | wearying others. The old ought to be extremely discreet. 7 XXXII | a big child).~Your ears ought to have burned last night. 8 XXXIII | internal struggles, if the hero ought to have any or if he ought 9 XXXIII | ought to have any or if he ought not to know them.~You always 10 XXXIII | than you need, and that you ought to let THE OTHER do it oftener. 11 XXXV | have not that spot; you ought to paint yourself. As for 12 XXXV | are working on now and I ought not to distract you from 13 XXXV | general tone and cut out what ought not to come down front stage. 14 XXXVII | like weeping at times. You ought to pity me!~As for our subject 15 XL | figure! and one that you ought to put in a book. I wonder 16 XLVI | in remembrance of me, you ought to climb up every fine day 17 XLVII | mania so common, that one ought to refrain from it through 18 XLVIII | tell you that if anyone ought to lend to me, it is Buloz 19 XLIX | Dear master,~You really ought to go to see the sun somewhere; 20 LX | religion; if that is so they ought to be superior to us. I 21 LXII | sun and without heat? I ought to be in Paris now, to see 22 LXIII | hope to meet you there. You ought to be in some lovely country, 23 LXXIV | I think that the artist ought to live according to his 24 LXXIV | instrument on which everything ought to play before he plays 25 LXXXVI | little Sahara there which ought to be lovely now.~We are 26 LXXXVI | use such a word, for he ought to have said IMBECILE. There 27 LXXXVII | think that the novelist ought to express his own opinion 28 XCIII | it seems to me as if IT OUGHT TO HAVE BEEN THE WAY IT 29 XCIII | Saint-Gueltas? The play ought not to be very hard to cut. 30 XCVI | Money not being the aim, ought not to be the preoccupation. 31 C | obliged to do anyhow,—you ought to be able to do at your 32 CI | who has no common sense ought not to try to live according 33 CI | glimpse of what a novel ought to be. But I still have 34 CIII | even with pretty faces that ought to give evidence of delicate 35 CV | changed, those of the obliger ought to change also. It must 36 CVII | distinguish good from evil? Life ought to be a continual education; 37 CVII | Goncourts.~The good Tourgueneff ought to be in Paris at the end 38 CXXII | government of a country ought to be a section of the Institute, 39 CXXIV | anxieties and sorrows. We ought to wish you to do what would 40 CXXX | me know where and when we ought to be there, I shall tell 41 CXXXV | Tuileries.” They think that one ought to prevent the publication 42 CXLIV | indolence of its mind. One ought to reflect before daring 43 CXLIV | instinctive, perhaps it ought to be taken into account.~ 44 CLV | better than most others, you ought to become exquisite.~You 45 CLXI | mad, between ourselves. He ought to like me for I let him 46 CLXIII | Nohant, 16 April, 1870~What ought I to say to Levy so that 47 CLXV | lovers to escape misery ought to inspire fine moral phrases 48 CLXXII | the good Saint-Antoine who ought to distract me. Is it the 49 CLXXIII | to the world that warfare ought to be suppressed or that 50 CLXXV | for everyone today that ought to extricate them from this 51 CLXXXV | gigantic ignorance. What ought to be studied is believed 52 CLXXXVII | that partisans (sincere) ought to change their formulas 53 CLXXXVII | it enough as it is! one ought to be distracted; for if 54 CLXXXIX | seemed to me that everybody ought to be tied up.~Half the 55 CXC | increases at the age when it ought to diminish. The day that 56 CXCVI | little returns to the past ought to give us courage; but 57 CXCVII | more: the people, which ought to unite with us, denies 58 CXCVII | virtuous by comparison.~That ought not to be what is called 59 CXCVII | love the people what they ought to do for them, and if you 60 CC | character would be what it ought to be. But our real discussions 61 CC | But our real discussions ought to remain between ourselves, 62 CCI | of his contribution. It ought to be so in the government 63 CCI | Money, mind, and even race ought to be reckoned, in short 64 CCI | who have so authority, you ought to take the lead. Your articles 65 CCXI | winter of ’70 to ’71, one ought to complain of nothing.~ 66 CCXII | did well.~I think that one ought never begin the attack; 67 CCXVI | him a call, I thought I ought to do so and I found him ... 68 CCXXXIII | she is your child; she ought to have some authority over 69 CCXXXIII | next trip to Paris, but we ought to talk about it together 70 CCXXXIII | about it together and you ought to read it to me. Why shouldn’ 71 CCXXXVI | earth for myself alone.~You ought to understand me, you who 72 CCXL | to be happy.—Perhaps you ought to have had in your life 73 CCXLVI | is further off. Then you ought to put yourself more in 74 CCXLVI | with, so powerful that they ought to give you the victory.~ 75 CCXLVI | than I do, and of which you ought to make a longer use. Consider 76 CCXLIX | Raspail, THE PHYSICIANS OUGHT to be MAGISTRATES, so they 77 CCLIII | article on Marion Delorme. It ought to be framed, if, however, 78 CCLXI | volcanic combinations, where we ought to have heard your Saint-Antoine 79 CCLXXI | philosophical spirit it ought not to be very distressing 80 CCLXXIII | that I add to yours: we ought to have: (1) lowered the 81 CCLXXX | what it is talking. You ought to do as I do and IGNORE 82 CCLXXXI | and YOU WILL BE WRONG. You ought to take care of yourself ... 83 CCLXXXVI | high and far ahead; but he ought to have strength in proportion 84 CCLXXXVI | now, no weakness! We all ought to be examples to our friends, 85 CCLXXXVIII| strength and your complexion ought to have lived an athletic 86 CCXCV | cannot do anything that I ought to do, I must, out of consideration 87 CCCII | heart-broken. You say that it ought to be like that, and that 88 CCCII | had, and that the public ought to have had, about the heroine, 89 CCCII | anti-human thing, and a novel ought to be human above everything. 90 CCCVI | way of thinking, that art ought to be the search for the 91 CCCVI | the picture of evil. It ought to be the picture of good 92 CCCIX | Sunday evening... 1876~You OUGHT to call me inwardly, dear 93 CCCXIII | You must be content? It ought to please? It is dramatic 94 CCCXIX | what you like.~The Public ought not to have all of us,—let


Best viewed with any browser at 800x600 or 768x1024 on Tablet PC
IntraText® (V89) - Some rights reserved by EuloTech SRL - 1996-2007. Content in this page is licensed under a Creative Commons License