Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library
Alphabetical    [«  »]
houdan 1
houdins 1
hour 19
hours 43
house 73
housed 2
household 4
Frequency    [«  »]
44 winter
44 yours
43 few
43 hours
43 money
43 really
43 saw
Gustave Flaubert
The George Sand-Gustave Flaubert letters

IntraText - Concordances

hours

   Letter
1 Introd | account of the heroine’s last hours, after the arsenical poisoning:~“ 2 Introd | you could leave for whole hours under a tree, or before 3 Introd | but above all spending hours with the little Aurore, 4 XXVI | at the engine for three hours and I came home as worn 5 XLIII | will have to spend several hours a day fussing over one’s 6 XLIV | strong except for several hours during the evening. Yet, 7 XLV | movement, and I walked for two hours and a half imagining all 8 XLVI | Certainly, it is an eight hoursjourney. You can not see 9 XLVIII | days. I slept thirty-six hours together, exhausted. Now 10 L | to see you.~Tell me the hours when you do not receive 11 LI | then he sleeps forty-eight hours and is cured—but feeble, 12 LVIII | SAND~I stayed thirty-six hours in Paris at the beginning 13 LX | you could leave for whole hours under a tree, or before 14 LX | on my bed for forty-eight hours and dont want any one to 15 LXV | where I have passed so many hours of my life reviving myself 16 LXXXIII | birth this morning after two hours of labor, to a boy who seemed 17 LXXXVI | shady; in the daytime four hours of work, in the evening, 18 LXXXIX | surprise you for a couple of hours; but I have not been a day 19 LXXXIX | you to spend twenty-four hours here for me. Will you do 20 XCIV | six speak well. One spends hours over the exits and entrances 21 XCVI | grandchildren, I slept thirty-six hours at one stretch. You must 22 CIII | but above all spending hours with the little Aurore who 23 CIII | when I have one or two hours a day to get to work on 24 CIV | information (from seven to nine hours in fiacres every day, which 25 CVI | have, every day, in two hours news from Milan by telegram. 26 CXLI | spare you two and a half hours of discomfort!~We embrace 27 CLXXIX | Prussians are now twelve hours from Rouen, and we have 28 CXCVII | suffering, in my mourning, in my hours of pure dejection even, 29 CCII | months have not exceeded five hours. I have been grubbing in 30 CCVII | have not been over five hours. What running about! What 31 CCVIII | all. I have some very sad hours. I look at MY FLOWERS, these 32 CCXVII | burst out laughing in your hours recreation.~I hope that 33 CCXXVII | line, so I can reserve the hours that you can give me. I 34 CCXXVIII| TO GEORGE SAND 1872~The hours that I could give you, dear 35 CCXXVIII| dear Master! Why, all the hours, now, by and by, and forever.~ 36 CCXXVIII| stopping for twenty-four hours. Then I would read you Saint-Antoine, 37 CCXL | good for old people! Two hours distant from here, we have 38 CCLVII | last week, one of eighteen hours, and Cruchard is as fresh 39 CCLIX | and I am now sleeping ten hours a night, not to mention 40 CCLIX | night, not to mention two hours a day. That is resting my 41 CCLX | woods.” For the last two hours now an imbecile stationed 42 CCLXVI | splendid! He slept seven hours in all, from Thursday morning ( 43 CCXCVIII| I do water-colors in my hours of recreation.~Aurore consoles


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