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| Alphabetical [« »] dear 291 dearest 2 dearly 1 death 46 deaths 2 debases 2 debatable 1 | Frequency [« »] 47 soon 47 working 46 ask 46 death 46 public 46 truth 46 year | Gustave Flaubert The George Sand-Gustave Flaubert letters IntraText - Concordances death |
Letter
1 Introd | on “Style.” When by the death of his father, in 1845, 2 XXVI | learning of Duveyrier’s death. Since you loved him, I 3 XXXI | love, but it is the hour of death and paf! in the midst of 4 XLVI | seem to his friends, that death will separate him from us. 5 XLVIII | that there is in it neither death nor birth, nor infinity, 6 LXV | have been sick over the death of my friend Rollinat. My 7 LXVIII | incident has died its beautiful death. Was it not a farce? and 8 LXX | have threatened me with death if I leave them so soon. 9 XC | oneself if it means wounds or death. Do you think that that 10 CXXI | February, 1848, demanded the death of Louis-Philippe “without 11 CXXIX | profit by my poor Bouilhet’s death. They will give you a “sort 12 CXLV | talk of nothing but the death of Noir! The general sentiment 13 CXLV | clearly than I did myself. His death has left a void that I notice 14 CLXVIII | Dear good master,~Barbes’ death has saddened me because 15 CLXVIII | against the eternal order. Has death perhaps no more secrets 16 CLXIX | poor Jules’ (de Goncourt) death, is the survivor. I am sure 17 CXC | seeing you, it is a sort of death.~G. Sand~ 18 CXCVII | which is drawing near to death? And what difference now 19 CXCVII | what difference now does death or life make to me for myself? 20 CXCVII | people, and to fight to the death against those who claim 21 CXCVII | wrong. The deluge comes and death captures us. In vain you 22 CXCVII | the ice, to an anticipated death. And anyway, I could not 23 CXCVII | not survive itself. Its death fertilizes nothing and those 24 CXCVII | and my race are struck to death, I feel it in my suffering, 25 CXCVII | your power is a phantom of death. A great number of men of 26 CXCVII | control and threatens with death whoever is not convinced 27 CCI | Maroteau is condemned to death like Rossel! It is madness! 28 CCXIII | loss to art, that premature death. In ten years there will 29 CCXVIII | balloon on four feet; (2) a death’s head emanating from an 30 CCXXI | follows the combat with death.~In short, my poor child, 31 CCXXXVII| first one had bored me to death with her spiritualistic 32 CCXXXIX | Although expected, the death of poor Theo has distressed 33 CCLI | solitude and await one’s death.~ 34 CCLXXII | for a month, bored me to death with corrections that I 35 CCLXXXVI| left, old age creeps on and death is pushing me by the shoulders.~ 36 CCLXXXVI| sorrows and joys and to summon death.~Mercy! If one were an egoist, 37 CCLXXXVI| who must continue working, death must not be summoned before 38 CCXC | are not rejoicing over the death of poor Michel. For me, 39 CCXCI | rejoice at Michel Levy’s death, and I even envy him that 40 CCXCI | and I even envy him that death so quiet. Just the same, 41 CCXCVIII| disposes, and one must take death and life as He wills.~Well, 42 CCCII | you curse life and desire death like a Catholic who yearns 43 CCCII | The desire for an early death, as that for a long life, 44 CCCV | while the other bored me to death, absolutely bored me to 45 CCCV | absolutely bored me to death; I longed to get to the 46 CCCXVII | does not disappear. Her death has left a great emptiness