Chapter
1 I | castle, of her castle. The road, called the parish road,
2 I | road, called the parish road, connecting the farms, joined
3 I | the farms, joined the high road between Havre and Fécamp,
4 III | them. On both sides of the road the crops were bending over
5 IV | still, and they left the road and took a narrow path beneath
6 V | in this wild country.~The road ran along the gulf and soon
7 V | make the air heavy. The road ascended gradually amid
8 V | trotted along quietly. The road now ran between two interminable
9 V | thinking only of the bad road, he said:~“You would do
10 V | gloomy Val d’Ota.~But the road was so bad that Julien proposed
11 V | of the declivity, as the road was so winding and uneven,
12 VI | beginning to swell.~The road was dreary and appeared
13 VI | stumbling against stones in the road, running and bounding, Marius
14 VI | woods, they walked along the road, mounting the ascent slowly.
15 X | counsel together.~Right in his road, in the middle of the farmyard,
16 X | stepped to the side of the road to let them pass, and bowed
17 X | of bushes, watching the road along which she whom he
18 XII | Goderville, on the high road to Montiviliers, in the
19 XII | even on the side of the road.~Jeanne wept all the evening.~
20 XII | some one stalking along the road; it was Abbé Tolbiac, who
21 XIII| at the side of the high road.~Four trellised arbors covered
22 XIII| hundred feet further along the road. There were no other houses
23 XIII| hurrying along the high road she met Rosalie coming from
24 XIII| attention to her. The high road before her door stretched
25 XIII| browsed along the side of the road. She came back every evening
26 XIII| little house on the main road. It is very lonely, but
27 XIII| side of the lonely high road. A few days before she thought
28 XIV | and took her on the high road, but at the end of twenty
29 XIV | down on the side of the road.~She soon became averse
30 XIV | she might be on the wrong road and it would turn out badly.
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