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| Alphabetical [« »] thinker 1 thinkers 3 thinking 44 thinks 30 third 12 thirds 1 thirst 2 | Frequency [« »] 30 loved 30 odeon 30 question 30 thinks 30 worth 29 artist 29 business | Gustave Flaubert The George Sand-Gustave Flaubert letters IntraText - Concordances thinks |
Letter
1 Introd | long withdrawing roar,” and thinks it is dying away, and is 2 Introd | the other.” Flaubert, who thinks that he has no “illusions” 3 XXXII | ask him if he sometimes thinks of his “old troubadour of 4 XXXIII | engineer, will decide it as he thinks best. He is not stupid and 5 XLIV | hearth or a home. Then one thinks of the statue, of the picture 6 XLVIII | not regrettable, unless he thinks that his little cocottes 7 LIX | your old troubadour who thinks unceasingly of you.~G. Sand~ 8 LXXII | he fears anemia, and he thinks he is doing his duty in 9 LXXIV | old fellow, and Maurice thinks your letter so fine that 10 XCIII | very amusing one. My mother thinks it recalls to her stories 11 CI | am like M. Prudhomme, who thinks that the most beautiful 12 CIII | right. The reason each of us thinks of the other at the same 13 CVI | MAMMA? I distract her, she thinks no more of it, and then 14 CXLIV | letter from Berton, who thinks that they will not play 15 CLVI | what invention consists, thinks it sees everywhere models. 16 CLVII | courtesy greater.—When one thinks highly of one’s mind one 17 CLXX | to fight: (1) because he thinks he is provoked to it by 18 CLXX | cannot contain himself. He thinks Prussia was too insolent 19 CLXXXVII | be distracted; for if one thinks too much about it, one becomes 20 CXC | beautiful marionette shows. He thinks of you every time and says 21 CCXXXI | of flowers. The peasant thinks that there are too many; 22 CCLIX | be satisfied with it. He thinks it will be a success. But 23 CCLXXIII | have my play printed, he thinks it so “silly and badly written”! 24 CCLXXVIII| returned also by Perrin, who thinks the play off-color and unconventional. “ 25 CCLXXIX | wants it any more for Perrin thinks it unconventional to put 26 CCLXXXIX | electricity will cure. One thinks that it is an effort.~I 27 CCXCVII | better endowed than one thinks, and, for my part, I should 28 CCCII | has the strength that one thinks one has not, when one desires 29 CCCII | deny him, arrogantly. He thinks that you scorn him and that 30 CCCII | hide it so well that he thinks you indifferent. He is right: