Part, Chapter
1 I, I | reason of the delicacy of his mind, remarkable executive ability
2 I, I | was as reasonable as her mind.~She possessed a touch of
3 I, I | an alert and cultivated mind, delicacy, fancy, the true
4 I, I | according to his state of mind that day.~She was merry
5 I, I | always succeed; and when her mind wandered to other things,
6 I, I | by contagion stirred his mind also. He was quite aware
7 I, I | a very strange state of mind.”~The clock struck, and
8 I, I | as she had a practical mind and was not lacking in courage,
9 I, I | the perturbation of her mind.~She repeated aloud, as
10 I, I | voice, having always in her mind the one thought which she
11 I, I | lightest expression of his mind. As soon as she fancied
12 I, II | was endowed with an alert mind and quick perceptions, with
13 I, III| index to the heart and mind of a woman: Musset, Manon
14 I, III| that child when her young mind, influenced by tastes and
15 I, III| them in review, calling to mind what she knew, thought,
16 I, III| which thrilled body and mind indescribably. His imagination
17 I, III| before his eyes and into his mind.~The orchestra was playing
18 I, III| studio, with clear eye, lucid mind, enthusiastic, alert, he
19 I, III| seeming to fill her feminine mind with these details, and,
20 I, III| to him, entering body and mind, like a fever; and he began
21 I, III| had come to say, and his mind was still full of unsaid
22 I, IV | aching heart. Through his mind ran arguments to convince
23 I, IV | confused them in his own mind. Sometimes, when Annette
24 I, IV | assumed, was engendered in the mind and heart of the painter
25 II, I | intention~to draw something. But mind, eye, and hand are all empty.
26 II, I | confound you both in my mind? Yes, perhaps.~“Well, then,
27 II, I | my~eyes, my ears, and my mind have had enough of it. They
28 II, II | Olivier flashed through her mind. Was he ill? Dead, perhaps,
29 II, II | thought suddenly crossed her mind.~“But I cannot wear it since
30 II, II | necessity to go away entered her mind, to depart immediately,
31 II, IV | This idea illumined his mind. He felt that he had awakened
32 II, IV | many affinities of body, of mind, and of character, and so
33 II, IV | organs, a form, a heart, a mind, a combination of attributes
34 II, IV | really penetrated to his mind. “Well,” said he to himself, “
35 II, IV | Hippodrome; changed his mind and turned toward the Nouveau
36 II, IV | was as paralyzed as his mind, and his persistent silence
37 II, IV | appeared to leave it to the mind to give a meaning to the
38 II, IV | could not drive her from his mind; he bore within himself
39 II, IV | soporific work; but his mind, aroused in spite of himself,
40 II, IV | from house to house, his mind was everywhere harassed
41 II, IV | them, and he allowed both mind and heart to give themselves
42 II, IV | captivating dream, he directed his mind toward all imaginable ideas,
43 II, IV | having always occupied his mind with them, having been obliged
44 II, IV | Olivier flashed across her mind, and she was seized, as
45 II, V | in her heart and in her mind. Then she was tortured by
46 II, V | tenderness which called up in his mind the radiant face of Annette.
47 II, V | that she had become one’s mind and body. We are intoxicated
48 II, V | some distraction for his mind, some occupation for his
49 II, V | could not distract his mind for a minute, and the news
50 II, V | tapestried drawing-room, her mind, distracted for the time
51 II, VI | just heard returned to his mind:~“I would have a treasure
52 II, VI | a thousand things in his mind, all his subjects for conversation
53 II, VI | succession, without his mind having yet settled itself
54 II, VI | preoccupied, hurried way, her mind haunted with feminine cares,
55 II, VI | condition. You must divert your mind; go to the club, or the
56 II, VI | Bertin’s importance need not mind such rudeness.”~Guilleroy
57 II, VI | asked the servant.~“Never mind that. Anything you like.
58 II, VI | fearful thoughts filled her mind; and she thought she could
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