Chapter
1 II | horizon, and she would remain sitting so long on the hill tops
2 II | to the edge of the wood, sitting down for five minutes at
3 IV | room before she was up, and sitting down at the foot of her
4 IV | six o’clock, as she was sitting with her mother under the
5 IV | lamp, and Aunt Lison was sitting beside them knitting; while
6 VII | these mornings, Jeanne was sitting warming her feet before
7 VII | as she saw her, rose to a sitting posture, whiter than the
8 VIII| his wife, who were still sitting under the plane-tree.~He
9 IX | out for a walk. She was sitting on a bank, gazing at the
10 XI | myself?” Her father rose and, sitting down beside her, put his
11 XI | recreation time, she would remain sitting in the reception room, not
12 XI | they waited in silence, sitting opposite each other.~When
13 XI | consumption.”~Then Jeanne, sitting up in bed, filled with a
14 XII | Jeanne sprang up in a sitting posture. “Sell ‘The Poplars’!
15 XIII| restlessness. She said as she was sitting down to dinner: “Oh, how
16 XIII| felt a pang at her heart. Sitting down at a little table she
17 XIII| look in, see all the people sitting at table eating, and would
18 XIV | see her father and mother sitting there, warming their feet
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