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| Alphabetical [« »] pry 1 psychic 1 psychology 3 public 46 publication 1 publicity 2 publicly 1 | Frequency [« »] 47 working 46 ask 46 death 46 public 46 truth 46 year 45 bouilhet | Gustave Flaubert The George Sand-Gustave Flaubert letters IntraText - Concordances public |
Letter
1 Introd | be love, friendship, the public welfare? Alas, it seems 2 Introd | unsuccessfully, as offensive to public morals. In derision of this 3 Introd | that he has detected in her public utterances a decisive change 4 Introd | up her great lyre—in the public Reponse a un ami of October 5 XXI | influence, all hold on the public, even in serving it to the 6 XLI | that appeals to another public, and I don’t stand in as 7 LV | My nausea caused by the public cowardice is decreasing.~ 8 LXXIV | incredible adventures.~The public is composed of eight or 9 CXLI | gentlemen; but the good public reads me and listens to 10 CXLIV | He is not the cut of the public that wants to eat in little 11 CXLIV | large pieces choke. But the public will go to him, just the 12 CLVI | my style. I invent. The public, who does not know in what 13 CLVII | you, dear madame, that the public is mistaken in attributing 14 CLXXII | Baden, a measure that the public finds very proper!~Are you 15 CLXXXVIII| to think no longer on the public miseries or on my own, I 16 CXCVI | for me, while serving the public, I think about it as little 17 CXCVII | indifference to what causes public unhappiness.~All that was 18 CXCVII | not have to answer, the public has other interests to discuss 19 CXCVIII | to argue against you in public. I tell you again in it 20 CXCIX | Commune. Its minister of public instruction was the great 21 CC | did, and I hear that the public of the theatres is more 22 CCI | respect on the part of the public.~In the theatre, the same 23 CCVII | plays of Clairville. The public agreed with me absolutely.~ 24 CCXI | rain and the flies. The public which is accused often of 25 CCXXXI | managers, the readers and the public when you are running about 26 CCXXXVII | BETRAYING ONE’S FRIENDS IN PUBLIC, seems to me to be taking 27 CCXLIV | without consideration for the public; that is perhaps not a bad 28 CCXLIV | would have taste if the public had it.~Now I’ve emptied 29 CCXLV | would have taste if the public had it...or if the public 30 CCXLV | public had it...or if the public forced him to have it.” 31 CCLXIV | reaction which would follow. Public opinion is absolutely against 32 CCLXXII | do better before the real public, but I don’t think so! I 33 CCLXXII | moreover I have fooled the public in regard to the title. 34 CCLXXV | these days, nothing. The public is not the public of other 35 CCLXXV | nothing. The public is not the public of other days, and journalism 36 CCLXXXII | the phrases of my novel.~Public intelligence seems to me 37 CCXCIX | subject of diversion to the public of which I am a part. There 38 CCCII | Bovary. If one part of the public cried scandal, the healthiest 39 CCCII | that you had, and that the public ought to have had, about 40 CCCII | everything. If it is not, the public is not pleased in its being 41 CCCV | and warmly applauded. The public was pleased and from time 42 CCCV | exactly of their calibre.~The public of last Tuesday shared my 43 CCCVI | is true, but there is a public conscience which weighs 44 CCCVIII | wrong? And how please the public when one’s nearest friends 45 CCCIX | reconcile all that.~As for the public, its taste disgusts me more 46 CCCXIX | words by what you like.~The Public ought not to have all of