Chapter
1 Int | two divisions of his spare hours, one for boating, and the
2 Int | and tansy he would lie for hours watching the frail insects
3 I | had pictured in her idle hours and in the long, quiet nights.
4 IV | a new meaning; even the hours of the day, which seem to
5 VI | excitement of hope filled her hours at that time, so that she
6 VIII| this almost in silence for hours at a time, while Julien
7 IX | and after driving for two hours across the plains of Normandy,
8 IX | excellently, she passed hours reading “Corinne” or Lamartine’
9 IX | absolution.~They watched for two hours beside this lifeless, discolored
10 X | in this way for several hours, taking short cuts, leaping
11 X | waited thus an hour, two hours perhaps. The buggy did not
12 XI | she had known him in the hours passed beneath the sunlight
13 XI | recreation at the usual hours, obliging him to work without
14 XI | riding over in a couple of hours, his mother, Aunt Lison
15 XI | attack that lasted several hours and then she took to her
16 XII | companions of our sad or sombre hours, who have grown old and
17 XIII| XIII~JEANNE IN PARIS~Two hours later the carriage stopped
18 XIII| melancholy, interminable hours, having no one to whom she
19 XIV | in space, sometimes for hours at a time, until she became
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