Chapter
1 I | over the waves. She was not thinking; her mind was not wandering
2 I | so clear. But Roland was thinking less of the loss than of
3 I | murmured, as though she were thinking aloud:~“Ah, he was a good
4 I | his death.~Mme. Roland sat thinking again in front of the lamp
5 II | opposed to those which the thinking man desires, aims at, and
6 II | to understand, but after thinking it over he hoped that the
7 III | suffering.~Then he began thinking of women. He knew very little
8 III | brother, he could not help thinking him somewhat mediocre and
9 III | very slightly.”~She sat thinking some minutes; then, with
10 III | made his way home he was thinking that he must see his brother
11 IV | or on the deck of a boat; thinking of his future, which should
12 IV | acquaintance?”~Again Roland sat thinking, but he could remember no
13 IV | though he could hear him thinking; he guessed and understood,
14 IV | felt sure, the old man was thinking: “You ought not to have
15 IV | the jetty with long steps, thinking no more of anything, content
16 VII | under his brother’s frolics, thinking him really too silly and
17 VIII| should be very glad.”~After thinking a few minutes Pierre added:~“
18 VIII| No—I know. But I was thinking of so many things.”~And
19 VIII| Jean made no reply. He was thinking of the man he had hitherto
20 IX | wide open for a long time, thinking over all that had happened
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