Chapter
1 I | raining harder when the carriage drove up to the door. Jeanne
2 I | with difficulty into the carriage, causing all the springs
3 I | good-by as they closed the carriage door, taking the last orders
4 I | howling storm beat upon the carriage windows and inundated the
5 I | scattered on the floor of the carriage. This roused her completely,
6 I | approaching. Everyone in the carriage was asleep except Jeanne.
7 I | were standing before the carriage door with lanterns in their
8 III | presently,” said the baron.~The carriage drove up to the door, and
9 III | They all four got into the carriage, and Ludivine, who brought
10 V | days later the travelling carriage arrived that was to take
11 V | alone seemed tearful. As the carriage was just starting she placed
12 V | purse in her pocket and the carriage started.~Toward evening
13 VI | armorial bearings on the carriage.~The old family coach had
14 VI | took off the cover of the carriage and Bataille examined it.
15 VI | hand; and they dragged the carriage outside so as to get a better
16 VI | himself, having sold the carriage horses to avoid buying feed
17 VI | his wife got out of the carriage, he had made a little cow
18 VI | belonging to old Simon, led the carriage up to the front door.~Julien,
19 VI | looked over the horses, the carriage, and the little groom, and
20 VI | husband’s arm and got into the carriage. Then Jeanne appeared. She
21 VI | baroness, looking out of the carriage window, was also convulsed,
22 VI | also convulsed, so that the carriage shook on its springs.~But
23 VI | the same, while, in the carriage, spasmodic sneezes, a sort
24 VI | ready to cry, got into the carriage and sat beside her mother.
25 VI | long. The occupants of the carriage were silent. All three sad
26 VI | drove past farmyards, the carriage jogging along unevenly with
27 VI | the servant to order the carriage to the door, but the bell
28 VI | insignificant matters.~At last the carriage passed the windows with
29 VI | as they were inside the carriage, Jeanne and her father,
30 VI | our class.”~Suddenly the carriage stopped, and Julien called
31 VI | Marius was following the carriage as fast as his legs could
32 VI | get away, to jump from the carriage, while his master, holding
33 IX | amusing.~When the travelling carriage stopped at the door and
34 XI | and the baron got into the carriage with him and set out on
35 XI | away. They got into the carriage and went back through the
36 XI | when she was alone in the carriage all manner of ideas came
37 XII | she had been running. The carriage containing the trunks and
38 XII | up and carried her to the carriage, placed her on the wooden
39 XII | by. He stopped to let the carriage pass. He was holding up
40 XIII| PARIS~Two hours later the carriage stopped at a little brick
41 XIII| in the two corners of the carriage.~She looked at the country
42 XIV | return and then got into the carriage.~When they lost sight of
43 XIV | station and got into the carriage.~“M. Paul will come as soon
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