Chapter
1 I | glee. He walked about the room, strummed on the furniture
2 II | softly about the adjoining room, and then, after drinking
3 V | darkness of his warm, closed room he was aware, even before
4 V | longer endure to stay in the room! This house, his father’
5 V | sleeping under the same room—father and son—were nothing
6 V | got up to go back to his room and mounted the stairs with
7 V | the door of his brother’s room he stood stock still, his
8 V | then he went back to his room, but not to bed again.~Day
9 V | at home again, and in his room, he hesitated about going
10 V | Pierre while he paced the room, Jean, sunk in a deep arm-chair,
11 V | and fro across the little room in four or five steps, met
12 VI | to lock herself into her room.~Roland and the doctor were
13 VI | pans.~They were to eat in a room, as the outer dining-halls
14 VII | first drawing-room, a small room hung with dead gold and
15 VII | the voice carries in this room; it would be capital for
16 VII | serious as they entered the room.~“Do you like it?” asked
17 VII | little abashed, in this room which was to be hers. She
18 VII | they were capable, and the room, with its bamboo furniture,
19 VII | silent. Mother is in the next room. Remember she may hear —
20 VII | mother in the adjoining room. He talked as if no one
21 VII | every one. He was pacing the room in the way he almost always
22 VII | she must come through his room. She had not come; then
23 VII | silent stairs, and into her room, undressed quickly, and
24 VIII| was waiting for him in her room.~“If you had not come,”
25 VIII| nervous.”~He rose and left the room.~Then Jean turned to his
26 VIII| her lover. On entering the room the eye was immediately
27 VIII| relic, and going across the room, put it in the drawer of
28 IX | the corners. The large low room, with its white marble panels
29 IX | to sit down in the little room, and he himself got on to
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