Chapter
1 Int | be amused was at once at home, on the same footing with
2 I | CHAPTER I~THE HOME BY THE SEA~The weather was
3 I | not set out for the new home in bad weather, and for
4 I | gentle. She had lived at home until the age of twelve,
5 I | everything and returned home for breakfast. When the
6 I | to remember. They walked home, chattering like two children,
7 II | as the heroine. Her new home was infinitely pleasing
8 II | The baroness, who was at home in heraldry, inquired if
9 II | family castle, made his home on one of the three farms
10 III | walks. When Jeanne was at home she would walk on the other
11 III | contact.~When she reached home that evening and went to
12 IV | embarrassed at being so far from home. What would they think?~“
13 IV | would they think?~“Let us go home,” she said.~He withdrew
14 IV | them in his. They walked home in silence, and the rest
15 V | paths.~It happened to be the home of a young couple. They
16 V | is cool.”~Then they went home to dinner, and the little
17 V | They delayed their return home four days longer, not being
18 VI | own country, in your own home, with the old folks?”~This
19 VI | of cassis. Then she went home to breakfast.~The day went
20 VI | begged them to send him home on foot, and after a great
21 VI | buried.~Instead of returning home by the woods, they walked
22 VIII| here one night when he came home late, after dining with
23 IX | more at his ease in his own home, and was delighted to see
24 IX | a dismissal.~On the way home Julien said: “If you like,
25 IX | evening as they were coming home the comtesse was teasing
26 IX | countenance.~As soon as she got home she ran to her son, carried
27 IX | for an hour.~Julien came home to dinner, smiling and attentive,
28 IX | but important events of home life, so petty to outsiders: “
29 IX | her prayerbook on the way home from church, she thinks
30 X | evening as they were coming home together to La Vrillette,
31 X | cap that he wore only at home, his hunting jacket, and
32 X | hedges, and thus got back home at dusk, not knowing how
33 XI | month, but one day Paul came home with a hoarseness and the
34 XI | misbehaved. So she kept him at home and taught him herself.
35 XI | day and called to take him home on Sundays. Not knowing
36 XI | forced to send him back home again, and the baron was
37 XI | a mustache. He now came home to “The Poplars” every Sunday,
38 XI | saying that he would not be home on the following day because
39 XI | For three months Paul came home only occasionally, and always
40 XI | evening he did not come home. They learned that he had
41 XI | affection, saying he was coming home at once to see his dear
42 XI | excuses for not having come home, saying that he had learned
43 XI | tell about herself, her home, her people, entering into
44 XII | CHAPTER XII~A NEW HOME~In a week’s time Rosalie
45 XII | that I shall always have a home whenever you want to seek
46 XII | take with her, as her new home was very small; and she
47 XIII| by the Trois-Mares, came home, then suddenly wanted to
48 XIII| She now longed to return home to her little house at the
49 XIV | thought of seeing her dear home once more.~The sky was cloudless
50 XIV | last farewell to her old home.~When they reached Batteville
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