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| Alphabetical [« »] situation 5 situations 1 siverain 1 six 43 sixty 1 sixty-eight 2 skeptical 3 | Frequency [« »] 43 money 43 really 43 saw 43 six 43 young 42 1869 42 doing | Gustave Flaubert The George Sand-Gustave Flaubert letters IntraText - Concordances six |
Letter
1 Introd | After “gulping” down the six volumes of Buchez and Roux, 2 X | and me far away. Come at six o’clock and dine with me 3 XLVI | gathered out-doors, five or six days ago; for the package 4 LI | go to join him in five or six days.~Little Aurore consoles 5 LIV | had ridiculous health for six months. March and April 6 LVIII | yourself for a labor that lasts six months!~I have enough more 7 LXV | that I could be in Paris at six o’clock in the evening at 8 LXVII | opportunity took me there six days ago. I had been enchanted 9 LXIX | carriage and be here at six for dinner. It is not bad, 10 LXXXV | have sawed wood hard for six weeks. The patriots won’ 11 XCIV | theatre every evening from six o’clock till two in the 12 XCIV | actors of whom only five or six speak well. One spends hours 13 XCVII | just gulped down the first six volumes of Buchez and Roux. 14 XCVII | write, that is to say, still six good months of work. I shall 15 XCVIII | you for it.~I embrace you six times if you say yes.~G. 16 XCIX | with my mother. I leave at six o’clock, and I am home at 17 CVII | clearly that at five or six years of age I wanted to “ 18 CXVIII | rest. Set the day, and AT SIX THIRTY if that does not 19 CXVIII | at Magny’s at half past six.~ 20 CXIX | count on you, at half past six; but as I am going to Palaiseau, 21 CXLII | program: we dine promptly at six o’clock, we have the Christmas 22 CXLII | the earliest at half past six, and we should not dine 23 CXLVI | dine with me at Magny’s at six o’clock. Can you? If not, 24 CLXV | I wrote this week nearly six pages, which was very good 25 CLXXVII | where you were.~Here it is six weeks that we have been 26 CLXXIX | suffered so atrociously for six weeks.~My mother has fled 27 CLXXXVI | cataclysms that happen every six thousand years; while the 28 CXCIV | alarm of the Parisians. “In six months, sir, the Commune 29 CCXXII | for my novel in five or six days at the office of le 30 CCXXXVI | seventeen than a child of six, not as much! thanks to 31 CCXLI | even to live in Paris for six months of the year: so it 32 CCXLVIII| you,~G. SAND~I embrace you six times for the New Year.~ 33 CCXLIX | to get together in Rouen six citizens of Rouen! That 34 CCLI | which will take five or six years to write, and I am 35 CCLX | accustomed during the last six weeks to seeing things from 36 CCLXIII | absolutely abandoned for six months. Ordinarily, I take 37 CCLXXIII| work that I shall start in six weeks will keep me busy 38 CCLXXVII| will have amused me for six weeks, that is the most 39 CCLXXXI | that had tormented him for six years. But to do that you 40 CCLXXXII| Plassans, seventeen hundred in six months, and there was an 41 CCXCII | us Friday at Magny’s at six o’clock, at least we could 42 CCXCV | of my bile.~For the last six months, especially, I don’ 43 CCCIII | the same thing to five or six other people.~I embrace