Chapter
1 Int | Maupassant retired to Cannes not far from his mother. He read
2 IV | when the baroness talked of far away things that happened
3 IV | it in the moonlight, as far as the dark wood. Attracted
4 IV | along the moonlit lawn as far as the little wood at the
5 IV | embarrassed at being so far from home. What would they
6 V | of the boat, reaching as far as the eye could see. Jeanne
7 V | gun went off and rolled as far as the big chestnut tree
8 VI | leafless poplars. She went as far as the shrubbery. It was
9 VI | detaches, separates, draws one far away from the things they
10 VIII| Oh, that is going too far, much too far!”~But Jeanne,
11 VIII| going too far, much too far!”~But Jeanne, happening
12 IX | desire to flee, to get away, far away.~Then Gilberte would
13 IX | came to Jeanne’s mind. How far away it seemed, how everything
14 X | felt herself lost in life, far away from everyone.~“As
15 X | told the news to everyone, far and wide, with the exception
16 X | specks of foam and bore them far into the land.~The hail
17 X | on his hands and knees as far as the lonely hut and hid
18 XI | or the courage to go very far from the school. The superintendent
19 XIII| went out for a walk, got as far as the hamlet of Verneuil,
|