Part, Chapter
1 I, I | you understand?”~Yes, he understood; he even thought the conception
2 I, I | her as her betrothed, she understood at once the advantages to
3 I, I | which he had long before understood, and, circumvented by his
4 I, I | unexpected harshness; then he understood, and murmured:~“I shall
5 I, I | that she alone of them all understood him.~She made the two drawing-rooms
6 I, II | time, had been mutually understood and agreed, without either
7 I, III| saddened him as if he now understood his bachelor’s isolation
8 I, III| Countess noticed his glances, understood that he wished to speak
9 I, III| drawing-room, to make it understood, without saying anything,
10 II, II | was playing tennis. She understood then the unknown anxiety
11 II, III| the first time, she had understood that, in her own drawing-room,
12 II, III| undoubtedly met her thought and understood with the shrewdness of a
13 II, III| What, you have not yet understood it?” she said, in a broken
14 II, IV | without understanding them. He understood them no more than if they
15 II, V | he pleased her.~She had understood very quickly, however, and
16 II, V | as a betrothed lover!~He understood, in a transport of exasperation,
17 II, V | Countess, who blushed. They understood each other.~When he was
18 II, V | dissimulation he suddenly understood.~“Oh, oh! it is time to
19 II, V | having it finished soon; he understood that in the shortest time
20 II, V | felt ready to sink, and understood, when he felt the light
21 II, V | had just discovered and understood the formidable flight of
22 II, VI | Duchess, quite carried away, understood and approved all the follies
23 II, VI | so gloomy, so tragic, she understood so clearly his hopeless
24 II, VI | of the head that she too understood. When the Countess had recited
25 II, VI | being; then she suddenly understood that she had seen simply
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