Chapter
1 I | lifted his line sunk in the sea.~Mme. Roland, dozing in
2 I | wide horizon of cliff and sea.~“You have had good sport,
3 I | And he looked round at the sea on all sides, with the satisfied
4 I | merchantman who had died at sea two years before. The young
5 I | when the sun has warmed the sea the fish bite no more; but
6 I | for was the sail on the sea, and seeing that his lines
7 I | Southampton.”~Away over the level sea, spread out like a blue
8 I | heavier.~This day on the sea had been delightful to her.
9 I | and glassy surface of the sea.~There were other vessels,
10 I | and spewed out to the open sea another fleet of steamers,
11 I | heavens, how beautiful the sea is!”~And Mme. Rosemilly
12 I | shore sloped down to the sea in pasture-lands, fields,
13 II | powerful beams across the sea. Starting from two neighbouring
14 II | watching the night-wrapped sea covered with ships; the
15 II | the breeze from the open sea.~He thought to himself: “
16 II | deprived of the company of the sea by his brother’s presence.
17 III | bow-window looking out over the sea.~When it came to taking
18 III | of being rolled about at sea, and whose ideas also seemed
19 III | me; since I have left the sea, in this way I give myself
20 III | in some pot-house by the sea, so as to escape all this
21 IV | Pierre. A fine breeze out at sea.”~“Well, then, old man,
22 IV | When they reached the open sea, round the nose of the north
23 IV | The prow ripped up the sea like the share of a plough
24 IV | there was a short, chopping sea—the Pearl shivered from
25 IV | the sky and covering the sea; it was sweeping down on
26 IV | harbour he heard, out at sea, a lugubrious and sinister
27 IV | the darkness, across the sea, which was invisible under
28 V | stood up and looked at the sea. The little steamer, once
29 V | rock standing up out of the sea. And the Seine, rolling
30 VI | to fling himself into the sea and put an end to it all
31 VI | eighty metres above the sea. Framed between the green
32 VI | about half-way between the sea and the foot of the precipice,
33 VI | trickled off to the distant sea through some invisible crevice.~
34 VI | positively clearing out the sea!”~The captain had, in fact,
35 VI | vast expanse of sky and sea and cliff.~Pierre, too,
36 VIII| was not to be ready for sea this summer.”~“Yes. The
37 VIII| Havre; and the remainder at sea with delightful company.
38 VIII| widow with a view of the sea, had fainted in an arm-chair;
39 IX | fogs which roll over the sea, coming up from the ends
40 IX | greedy, heaving, complaining sea; no space around for walking,
41 IX | Pierre went down to the sea. As he reached the jetty
42 IX | good-bye out on the open sea.”~Old Roland was very eager
43 IX | readiness to put out to sea.~There was not a breath
44 IX | autumn days, when the sheeny sea looks as cold and hard as
45 IX | beautiful daughter given to the sea by the great maritime town.~
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