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| Alphabetical [« »] chide 1 chief 9 chiefs 1 child 31 childbirth 1 childhood 6 childish 2 | Frequency [« »] 32 taken 31 anyone 31 change 31 child 31 entirely 31 half 31 january | Gustave Flaubert The George Sand-Gustave Flaubert letters IntraText - Concordances child |
Letter
1 Introd | Aurore, who is a marvellous child. There is not a more tranquil 2 Introd | people say; no, he is a child in prosperity, a man in 3 XXVII | step on the body of that child. That puts me quite a distance 4 XXXII | not to KISS you like a big child).~Your ears ought to have 5 LIX | development of a little child! No one has ever written 6 LXXIV | getting up to run after her child, her cook, her husband, 7 LXXXI | very well, and that the child has every reason to be superb. 8 XCIII | stories that she heard while a child. A propos of Vendee, did 9 CII | friend, and my dear, big child. May ’69 be easy for you, 10 CIII | Aurore who is a marvelous child. There is not a more tranquil 11 CVII | and having played, as a child, in a dissecting amphitheatre? 12 CVII | talks to his idol, and a child who talks to her doll seem 13 CVII | to me close together.~The child and the savage (the primitive) 14 CXXV | if you were my dear big child. Why can’t I put the rosy, 15 CXLIV | would change to joy.~That child is very dear to me. He is 16 CXLVII | He was as surprised as a child. We spoke ill of you.~Wednesday 17 CLIII | 1870~How are you, my poor child? I am glad to be here in 18 CLVIII | you a kiss like a little child. My oppressed heart is easier, 19 CLXXIII | people say; no, he is a child in prosperity, a man in 20 CXCVII | of the pedagogue and the child who is drowning. You might 21 CCXI | am trying to simplify a child’s approach to culture, being 22 CCXXI | death.~In short, my poor child, I can only open a maternal 23 CCXXII | than I would with you, dear child. They are going to pay me 24 CCXXXIII| around a bit; she is your child; she ought to have some 25 CCXXXVI | advanced at seventeen than a child of six, not as much! thanks 26 CCLXVI | the name Antoine to the child that she is expecting! I 27 CCLXIX | facility and docility; that child is my life and ideal. I 28 CCLXXXIX| her laugh and play like a child, always good, and tender, 29 CCXC | approximate renderings.~The child is a singular mixture of 30 CCCI | a mother can permit her child to read. The whole will 31 CCCIX | of the kidnapping of the child, the trip in the carriage,