Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library
Alphabetical    [«  »]
moscow 1
moss 1
most 82
mother 83
mother-in-law 1
motif 2
motion 2
Frequency    [«  »]
86 another
86 less
84 world
83 mother
82 children
82 most
81 longer
Gustave Flaubert
The George Sand-Gustave Flaubert letters

IntraText - Concordances

mother

   Letter
1 Introd | the Parisian milliner, her mother, and predestined her for 2 Introd | and Henry James. From his mother’s Norman ancestry he inherited 3 Introd | event whatsoever. I see my mother and my niece on Sundays, 4 XIII | I embrace you. Tell your mother how much I appreciate and 5 XIV | of all, embrace your good mother and your charming niece 6 XVIII | pick a quarrel with your mother and we shall laugh and joke, 7 XVIII | Embrace your beautiful, good mother for me. I shall give myself 8 XXIV | thinking of you and your mother at Croisset and looking 9 XXVI | of conversation with my mother is you, everyone here loves 10 XXVII | go out and buy your dear mother’s shoes. Next week I am 11 XXVII | evening when you called your mother “MY DAUGHTER,” two tears 12 XXVII | embrace you tenderly, and your mother too, and the charming niece! [ 13 XXXI | also, alone also; for your mother must be in Rouen. Tonight 14 XXXIX | Affectionate regards to your mother, brother and niece.~G. Sand~ 15 XLI | Richelieu, I wrote to your mother thinking that it was she 16 XLII | friend; remember me to your mother, to your dear family, and 17 XLIII | event whatsoever. I see my mother and my niece on Sundays, 18 XLVIII | affectionate regards to your mother and to your lovely niece.~ 19 LV | The reason is this: my mother had a little stroke a week 20 LVI | worried about your dear, old mother, and certainly I can not 21 LVI | a good sign for the dear mother.~Maurice has plunged again 22 LVII | morning~I am returning to my mother next Monday, dear master. 23 LIX | golden age.~How is your dear mother? She is fortunate to have 24 LX | Therefore your dear good mother, whom I do not want to miss, 25 LX | may be the plans of your mother or yourself. I am very free. 26 LX | discovers marvels. Embrace your mother for me, and take good care 27 LXI | embrace you as well as your mother.~G. Sand~ 28 LXII | leisure, and to take your mother to walk with you; but I 29 LXIV | false stroke. How is your mother? Have you been able to take 30 LXV | and I love you (also your mother). Maurice also, what French! 31 LXVII | sung a ballad under your mother’s window. But I could not 32 LXVIII | with Madame Sand, and my mother hopes that will be the case. 33 LXX | And you. Your work? your mother’s health? I am worried at 34 LXXII | remembered to your good mother.~G. Sand~ 35 LXXVI | G. Sand~My love to your mother always. I imagine that she 36 LXXXI | so much. Tell your little mother, just that. Then I shall 37 LXXXII | you, only of you and your mother, and we said a hundred times 38 LXXXII | Luxembourg garden.~I embrace you, mother and son, with all my heart 39 LXXXIII | lovely this evening. The mother is very well, what luck!~ 40 LXXXIX | with all my heart, and your mother too. I am happy that she 41 XCIII | told you of it sooner if my mother and my niece had not taken 42 XCIII | and a very amusing one. My mother thinks it recalls to her 43 XCIII | political antecedents.~My mother is going in a few days to 44 XCVI | tenderly as well as your little mother. Give me some sign of life. 45 XCIX | Sundays at Rouen with my mother. I leave at six oclock, 46 CVI | the lap of her father and mother and who weeps every day 47 CX | been a little ill. Lina’s mother has come to get into touch 48 CX | girls console their little mother. If it were less bad weather, 49 CXXXIX | them too much.~G. S.~My mother has your telegram and is 50 CXLIV | and this economy for his mother who is poor. It appears 51 CLXIV | and now that the little mother is away, the little children 52 CLXV | settled in Croisset. Then my mother has been very much indisposed. 53 CLXV | and my poor good simple mother has become so old that all 54 CLXVI | am living alone with my mother, who is becoming deafer 55 CLXXIV | Ah! if I did not have my mother, I would already be gone!~ 56 CLXXVI | going mad. The face of my mother, when I turn my eyes toward 57 CLXXIX | atrociously for six weeks.~My mother has fled to Rouen. My niece 58 CLXXXV | and to forget France.~My mother stays here with her grandchild, 59 CLXXXVIII| aged my poor, dear, old mother by ten years! What a change! 60 CLXXXVIII| an actress, but as a good mother of a family! They asked 61 CXCI | go further I away from my mother now. Her society afflicts 62 CXCII | Embrace your good little mother for me.~G. Sand~ 63 CXCIII | yourself, tell me of your poor mother, your family, of Croisset. 64 CXCIV | t dare to leave my poor mother! When I am obliged to be 65 CXCV | so serious and sweet! My mother was quite touched by it, 66 CXCVII | bourgeoisie; for my part, on my mother’s side my roots spring directly 67 CCVIII | smiling, their charming mother and my wise hardworking 68 CCXI | You dont tell me of your mother; is she in Paris with her 69 CCXVI | I am going away with my mother: we are in search of a companion 70 CCXVII | is depressed we are dead; mother, wife, and children. Aurore 71 CCXVII | why is your poor little mother so irritable and desperate, 72 CCXVII | as a companion for your mother? Perhaps I know of such 73 CCXVIII | bodily care to give, as my mother would keep her maid.~We 74 CCXIX | I thought that your poor mother was too deaf to listen to 75 CCXX | and not very happy; my mother worries me. Her decline 76 CCXXIII | certainly ask you for it.~My mother has left Croisset to Caroline 77 CCXXIII | that my poor dear, good mother was the being that I have 78 CCXXV | than there; “my poor old motherloved you very much, would 79 CCLXXXIII| nominated for Chateauroux. His mother has followed him.~So we 80 CCCI | little silly story, which a mother can permit her child to 81 CCCXVI | me that I was burying my mother the second time. Poor, dear, 82 CCCXVI | should have pride in his mother!~Now dear friend, adieu! 83 CCCXVII | the good counsel of your mother. She had found the best


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