Chapter
1 Int | as long as possible the hour of separation. One day,
2 Int | oneself up more and more. The hour is late, the night is at
3 III | will find me here in an hour.”~They walked straight ahead
4 IV | little wood at the end. The hour grew late and they did not
5 V | ordered breakfast.~After an hour’s rest they arranged an
6 VI | told, everything, in a half hour, except, perhaps, a few
7 VII | not suspect anything.”~An hour later the priest came, looking
8 IX | of about a quarter of an hour they saw them returning
9 IX | She waited a quarter of an hour, twenty minutes, surprised,
10 IX | him passionately for an hour.~Julien came home to dinner,
11 IX | only went out for half an hour each day to take one turn
12 IX | her mind.~At the end of an hour she was allowed to come
13 IX | goes out; we shall have an hour together. I worship you.”
14 IX | paling. It was the cool hour that precedes the dawn.
15 X | to know. He replied: “The hour has not arrived. I shall
16 X | predicting the approach of the hour when God would smite all
17 X | sound.~He waited thus an hour, two hours perhaps. The
18 XI | trying to steal off an hour earlier each evening. Jeanne
19 XII | do it; I never could.”~An hour later the postman brought
20 XII | She remained thus over an hour, apparently dead. Then she
21 XIII| planning.~At the end of an hour the wagon appeared at the
22 XIII| the quays.~After about an hour she found the Rue Sauvage,
23 XIII| she sat down here for an hour or two.~A crowd of people
24 XIV | about. She rose at the same hour every day, looked out at
25 XIV | two minutes more. Then the hour of the train’s arrival,
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