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| Alphabetical [« »] designate 1 designated 1 designates 1 desire 29 desired 3 desires 6 desk 2 | Frequency [« »] 29 business 29 came 29 criticism 29 desire 29 evil 29 lina 29 means | Gustave Flaubert The George Sand-Gustave Flaubert letters IntraText - Concordances desire |
Letter
1 Introd | him nearer to her heart’s desire. He, with a playful deference 2 Introd | novel should originate in a desire to present a certain segment 3 I | you. For I have a great desire to see you and to talk with 4 XVI | all. I have had a great desire to question you, but a too 5 XVII | and I am torn between the desire of gaining a few piasters 6 XXIV | survive it? I don’t ardently desire to, above all on these days 7 XXXV | impotent. Some too strong in desire are quickly exhausted. In 8 XLIII | then, since you have the desire, to the Mediterranean. Its 9 XLIV | an anguish caused by the desire of an impossible SOMETHING 10 XLVIII | against nature; for it is not desire that drives the young girl 11 XLVIII | will breathe into me the desire to take up my work again. 12 LIV | at all an ordinary woman,—desire absolutely that you come 13 LXVIII | it is not that I lack the desire of being free to move about. 14 XCIX | I am distracted with my desire to say “yes.” It makes me 15 CXXVIII | Paris, as they have a slight desire to do, I shall leave again 16 CLXX | even a pretext. It is the desire to fight for the sake of 17 CLXXXIX | master,~I never had a greater desire or a greater need to see 18 CXCVII | breath tormented by the desire, by the imperious need of 19 CXCVII | people of Paris, unless you desire to maintain the distinction 20 CXCVII | compulsory education which we all desire through respect for human 21 CXCVII | whoever he may be. Let us desire to establish it in our customs, 22 CCLXXIII| turn him aside from his desire to go to entrap his wife. 23 CCCII | since you curse life and desire death like a Catholic who 24 CCCII | they shall not fall. The desire for an early death, as that 25 CCCII | have of them, that is to desire not to be understood, and 26 CCCII | husband, and her lovers.~That desire to depict things as they 27 CCCII | brilliant, but in which the desire of good finds its place 28 CCCVIII | path, in spite of his own desire. In short, your Cruchard 29 CCCIX | never sought it (although I desire it) and I seek it less and