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| Alphabetical [« »] time-spirit 2 timeliness 1 timely 1 times 53 timid 2 timorous 1 tinan 1 | Frequency [« »] 53 moment 53 rest 53 saint-antoine 53 times 52 age 52 clock 52 himself | Gustave Flaubert The George Sand-Gustave Flaubert letters IntraText - Concordances times |
Letter
1 Introd | of her cause. “A hundred times in life,” she declares, “ 2 Introd | irritated, the prey a thousand times a day of cruel pain, I continue 3 Introd | as well as against modern times, much in the fashion of 4 XVI | bones! I prefer a thousand times your rich Normandy, or, 5 XVIII | what it is, and at other times don’t you feel over you 6 XXI | wounds of pride. A hundred times in life, the good that one 7 XXV | arrange it, I kiss you three times on each eye.~G. Sand~Five 8 XXXII | melancholy that overwhelm one at times? They rise like a tide, 9 XXXVII | have laughed aloud many times. I thank you very dear master, 10 XXXVII | I feel like weeping at times. You ought to pity me!~As 11 XLI | crude deception of the new times. It is quite natural that 12 XLIII | you have not died twenty times over, having thought so 13 XLV | weighs on my shoulders at times! He writes too slowly and 14 XLVII | he finds himself short at times, and he grumbles “in the 15 LXIX | have seen your house four times without going to see you. 16 LXXIV | down on the sofa twenty times a day, getting up to run 17 LXXXII | mother, and we said a hundred times that we loved you. I am 18 XCVIII | for it.~I embrace you six times if you say yes.~G. Sand~ 19 CIII | identifying ourselves at times with what is not ourselves.~ 20 CXXII | meant when I wrote that the times of politics were over. In 21 CLVII | Bovary I was asked many times: “Is it Madame X. whom you 22 CLVIII | evening, and I wept several times. It did me good, really! 23 CLXI | everything and nothing, many times a day. Then, it passes and 24 CLXXI | found in these accursed times?~Happily, we have no one 25 CLXXXIV | I embrace you a thousand times for myself and for all my 26 CXCI | been to his house several times and I have written three 27 CXCV | makes us slander our own times. Man has always been like 28 CXCVII | his nature?~No, a hundred times no. Humanity is outraged 29 CCI | who may be worth a hundred times more. In an industrial enterprise ( 30 CCVI | we called your name three times, did you hear it at all?~ 31 CCXXXVI | or in the fields at the times when I entrusted her to 32 CCXXXVIII| you; but we live in cruel times and we must not undergo 33 CCXXXIX | the “putrescence of modern times.” That is his word, and 34 CCXXXIX | to me this winter several times: “I am dying of the Commune,” 35 CCXLI | have gone through, several times, melancholy periods, and 36 CCXLV | publish, in these abominable times? Is it to get money? What 37 CCXLV | tell you that, until better times (in which I do not believe), 38 CCXLVIII | SAND~I embrace you six times for the New Year.~ 39 CCLVI | what a bore to live in such times! How wise you are live so 40 CCLXII | the imbecilities of our times, that (fusion) is perhaps 41 CCLXXV | shrewdest are mistaken ten times out of fifteen. You say 42 CCLXXV | or that paper? In former times it meant something; in these 43 CCLXXIX | to return there several times.~Beginning with September, 44 CCLXXXVI | the real Zeus of modern times, the son of Time, and has 45 CCLXXXIX | you, although you are ten times as strong as I am, but your 46 CCXCIX | setting than that of modern times, and does me good. Then 47 CCCI | deal. I have reread it ten times, and I shall confess to 48 CCCI | You are right a thousand times over, but by what means 49 CCCII | Therefore you are a hundred times richer than all of us; you 50 CCCIX | worries me extremely and, at times, disturbs my brain, so that 51 CCCIX | stage: no, no, a thousand times no! I do not recognize the 52 CCCX | deeply and two or three times I wept. I recognized myself 53 CCCXVIII | to the Bayard of modern times?~I have been in Paris, or