Part, Chapter
1 I, I | unintentionally made her sad, without knowing how to
2 I, I | suddenly heard her say, in a sad little voice:~“Mamma, I
3 I, I | daughter, with a smile so sad, an expression so pathetic,
4 I, III| now feel very lonely and sad.~As he listened, the painter
5 I, III| is the matter? You seem sad.”~His heart thrilled within
6 I, III| concerned lest she had made him sad.~“Oh, but your hair turned
7 II, I | has left me to-day. How sad all this is, how hard, and~
8 II, II | herself and to think of sad things no more, in order
9 II, II | Never before had she felt so sad. It was no more the great
10 II, II | saying: “Let us see that sad face.”~She felt ready to
11 II, II | would come when I should be sad without cause, uneasy, discontented
12 II, II | content, she could not feel sad, and she smiled, thinking: “
13 II, II | Madame is going to make a sad face for herself again to-morrow.”~
14 II, III| prayed because her heart was sad, especially when she suspected
15 II, V | was his turn to close her sad lips with his fingers, saying:~“
16 II, V | hands, deeply moved and very sad. At last she broke the silence,
17 II, V | profound, physical, frightfully sad, had seized him! He felt
18 II, V | with her tears!~Ah, what sad things! What sad things!
19 II, V | Ah, what sad things! What sad things! The poor woman!~
20 II, V | satisfaction to Olivier’s sad heart.~He undressed quickly,
21 II, VI | heart was weighed down by sad presentiments.~In the three
22 II, VI | him roving the streets, so sad and lonely, fleeing under
23 II, VI | thousand intimate things, so sad, which they had still to
24 II, VI | Ah, my poor Any, how sad life is! . . . and how hard
25 II, VI | was a mysterious reply, sad questions and sad replies,
26 II, VI | reply, sad questions and sad replies, those “do you remembers?”
27 II, VI | her away at last from this sad tete-a-tete.~As she tried
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