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| Alphabetical [« »] worrying 4 worse 20 worst 7 worth 30 worthy 12 would 331 wouldn 2 | Frequency [« »] 30 odeon 30 question 30 thinks 30 worth 29 artist 29 business 29 came | Gustave Flaubert The George Sand-Gustave Flaubert letters IntraText - Concordances worth |
Letter
1 Introd | diverse natures which are best worth the remembrance of posterity. 2 VI | frightfully cold and it is not worth the trouble to come to the 3 VII | the first condition of any worth is to be one’s self.~If 4 XIX | poor phrase, for we two are worth more than those two amiable 5 XXI | You don’t find what you do worth being described. That is 6 XXXV | you some day, it would be worth while.~Where is the model? 7 XXXVII | you that there is anything worth while to be done with the 8 XLII | thousand things which are not worth any more than oneself. I 9 XLVII | But so many others who are worth more than I am not having 10 XLVIII | and perfection. Immense worth without immediate application 11 LVI | of any use. Still it is worth more than to say mass and 12 CI | get drunk with ink is more worth while than to get drunk 13 CXLII | the sure proof of great worth. Tell yourself indeed that 14 CXCV | and even money, which is worth more than numbers.~But society ( 15 CXCVII | humanity. The debris is not worth the effort, very good! They 16 CXCVIII | let me suffer! That is worth more than viewing INJUSTICE 17 CCI | his neighbor, who may be worth a hundred times more. In 18 CCI | government of a nation. I am worth fully twenty electors of 19 CCXXXIII| poor mankind, which is not worth much, but of which I am 20 CCXXXIII| which I am part, not being worth perhaps very much myself.~ 21 CCXL | know that the feminine is worth nothing; but, perhaps, in 22 CCXLIV | to have a reader who is worth ten thousand others! That 23 CCLIV | That FETID thing is not worth the trouble of reading, 24 CCLVIII | opinion that nothing is worth the trouble of being said!~ 25 CCLXXVII| don’t at all know if it is worth anything and don’t worry 26 CCXCIV | it is always so, and the worth of men is measured according 27 CCCII | GOOD TASTE! Our work is worth only what we are worth.~ 28 CCCII | is worth only what we are worth.~Who is talking about putting 29 CCCII | art of narration, is only worth while through the opposition 30 CCCV | independently of its real worth, gained by contrast. Madame