Part, Chapter
1 I, I | much the worse!”~Their lips met.~He took her parasol and
2 I, I | subject for a chat.~When they met again the next day they
3 I, I | what he should do when he met her.~After her hasty departure—
4 I, I | moment when their lips had met, when their beings had united
5 I, I | than the day they first met at the Duchesse de Mortemain’
6 I, I | fancy for a woman he had met one day just as he had already
7 I, I | day just as he had already met so many others! She realized
8 I, II | Minister that morning and had met the Grand Duke Vladimir,
9 I, II | celebrities of the world, who met and complimented one another
10 I, II | names of the persons he had met that morning; then passing
11 I, II | often hunted together, and met while riding in the avenues
12 I, III| Among the persons he had met, perhaps one might have
13 I, III| and found, as their eyes met, a little of the shy hesitation
14 I, III| which the mother’s gaze had met his in the first days of
15 II, II | him and seeing him.~They met in the antechamber, before
16 II, II | such as you were when I met you long ago when I entered
17 II, II | entranced the painter when they met for the first time.~Then
18 II, II | breathed deeply, and, as he met the Countess’s look, he
19 II, II | inquired of a servant she met in the vestibule.~“Monsieur
20 II, III| arms, having undoubtedly met her thought and understood
21 II, IV | the same point, where he met a fair young face that seemed
22 II, V | his eyes, growing hard, met those of the Countess, who
23 II, V | minute, and the news he read met his eye without reaching
24 II, VI | for a fellow-countryman met in a distant land, for he
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