Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library
Alphabetical    [«  »]
ii 1
iii 3
iliad 1
ill 73
ill-concealed 1
illness 17
illnesses 5
Frequency    [«  »]
76 men
74 years
73 house
73 ill
72 against
72 many
72 right
Gustave Flaubert
The George Sand-Gustave Flaubert letters

IntraText - Concordances

ill

   Letter
1 Introd | whether he sings well or ill, provided he sings the motif 2 Introd | it. They do me a lot of ill turns which I see, but which 3 XVI | who does neither good nor ill when turning to the right 4 XXVII | remind me of it.~I have been ill for two days. I am cured. 5 XXXIII | sings as he likes, well or ill, and when I try to think 6 XXXV | everything, do everything ill. If love for them is a little 7 XL | that you had been seriously ill at one of the recent Magny’ 8 XLIV | it too much. When I was ill in Paris, I saw a physician, 9 XLVI | and might indeed make you ill also. Good Heavens! It is 10 LV | Sainte-Beuve seems to me very ill, and Bouilhet has just been 11 LVI | went on very well or very ill, one would reattach oneself 12 LXIII | even knowing that he was ill, my poor dear, old friend, 13 LXIV | to travel while you were ill. Ah! my God, I dream of 14 LXV | you are even a little bit ill still, or are PLUNGED in 15 LXIX | the cold does not make me ill, and I shall try this time 16 LXXIV | crying out that she feels ill and bursting into shrieks 17 XCVI | it. They do me a lot of ill turns which I see, but which 18 XCVII | master. You told me of the “ill turns” that people did you. 19 CIII | whether he sings well or ill, provided he sings the motif 20 CIII | how to WISH my colleagues ill luck, I am in no hurry and 21 CVI | Calamatta who is dangerously ill. Should they have the misfortune 22 CX | Aurore has been a little ill. Lina’s mother has come 23 CXII | chance, I do not have the ill luck to miss you.~Monday.~ 24 CXXXII | it is going to make you ill, dont come, I know very 25 CXXXIX | You seem astonished at the ill will. You are too simple. 26 CXLIV | bring him up, he was always ill, always dandled on the knees 27 CXLVII | surprised as a child. We spoke ill of you.~Wednesday evening.~ 28 CLI | your patient, but you are ill too, and I am very anxious 29 CLIII | having left you melancholy, ill and upset. Send me news, 30 CLIX | been seriously, dangerously ill.[Footnote: With diptheria.] 31 CLXIII | keeping awake. But I am not ill, and I work a little now 32 CLXIII | can see that you are still ill and that you are working 33 CLXV | No, dear master! I am not ill, but I have been busy with 34 CLXXI | Happily, we have no one ill at our house. When I see 35 CLXXXVI | sent from Dieppe? Are you ill? Are you still alive? What 36 CXC | letter.]~ No, I am not ill, my dear old troubadour, 37 CXCI | nor prevented) the least ill. The reestablishment of 38 CXCIII | will pass, I hope; but I am ill with the illness of my nation 39 CXCVII | emanations are struck by the ill that killed it. Poor Germany! 40 CXCIX | justice,” and all our ill comes from forgetting absolutely 41 CC | Chilly is very; seriously ill, and that Pierre Berton 42 CCXIV | Now you have it.~I was ill all last week. My throat 43 CCXVII | spent! Maurice has been very ill. Continually these terrible 44 CCXVII | she would like to be very ill in her father’s place We 45 CCXVIII | strangely old. He must be very ill, doubtless with heart trouble, 46 CCXXV | that my poor Theo is very ill? He is dying from boredom 47 CCXLVI | said to you that all the ill any one can do me, or all 48 CCXLVI | advance, the subject of ill humor, of contempt or of 49 CCLI | certain, is, that I was very ill in an indefinable way. But 50 CCLII | I am not happy over your ill tempers, and your PREJUDICES. 51 CCLVIII | forwarded to you. I have been ill, your reverence, nothing 52 CCLXIII | The truth is that he was ill just then. He has had a 53 CCLXVII | your play and dont get ill this hateful winter.~Your 54 CCLXXI | two little girls cruelly ill with the grippe have taken 55 CCLXXV | Quatre-vingt-treize. I said that I was ill. The fact is, that I do 56 CCLXXX | return here, I have been ill with the grippe, rheumatic, 57 CCLXXX | it; I am not more often ill, now, illness PROSTRATES 58 CCLXXXI | Righi, 14 July, 1874;~What? ill? poor, dear master! If it 59 CCLXXXII | s Une Chaine. France is ill, very ill, whatever they 60 CCLXXXII | Chaine. France is ill, very ill, whatever they say; and 61 CCLXXXIII | Cruchard, you have been ill? That is what I feared, 62 CCLXXXIII | about yourself, do not be ill, always love your old troubadour 63 CCLXXXVII | told me that you were VERY ill. Your good handwriting came 64 CCLXXXVII | is the work that makes me ill, for I have undertaken a 65 CCLXXXVIII| February~Then you are quite ill, dear old fellow? I am not 66 CCLXXXVIII| necessarily is when one is ill.~I was sure that a moment 67 CCXCV | me, but I feel dreadfully ill, without being able to get 68 CCXCVII | shall be done.~I have been ill all the summer, that is 69 CCXCVIII | revival. I have been so ill all the summer and I am 70 CCC | something better. I was so ill all summer! but my strange 71 CCC | whether for good or for ill, the event is always conquered. 72 CCCIV | deluge, and it makes me ill. I should not have been 73 CCCXIV | yesterday that she was very ill, why has not Maurice answered


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