Chapter
1 II | glisten on the deck of the boat.~At each meal he gave an
2 III| helped to shove off the boat from shore, which was not
3 III| shingly beach. Once the boat was afloat, they all took
4 III| waves, held the side of the boat with one hand as she looked
5 III| out first to make fast the boat, while the vicomte lifted
6 III| cliffs.~They got into the boat, started off smoothly with
7 III| horizon to the edge of their boat. The wind subsided, the
8 III| gleams in the wake of the boat. They were hardly thinking,
9 III| was standing around a new boat wreathed with flowers. Its
10 III| the proprietor of this boat, built with the baron’s
11 III| of him, to one end of the boat, while at the other end,
12 III| meditatively in the baptism of this boat, rolling its tiny waves,
13 III| He then walked round the boat, sprinkling it with holy
14 III| standing alongside the boat opposite the sponsors, who
15 V | excursion in Père Lastique’s boat?” said Jeanne.~Instead of
16 V | remained in the wake of the boat, reaching as far as the
17 VII| with him in Père Lastique’s boat, their conversation, his
18 VII| the christening of the boat; then she went back, further
19 VII| baptism? Aha, it will not be a boat this time.” And in a graver
20 IX | sound of oars was heard, a boat grinding against the stones,
21 IX | pond. At one end of the boat Julien and the comtesse,
22 XI | spring and they hired a boat for him at Yport, in spite
23 XI | that he had gone out in a boat with two sailors. His mother,
24 XI | the beach, waiting for the boat to come in. There was a
25 XI | light on board an incoming boat, but Paul was not on board.
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