Part, Chapter
1 I, I | Guilleroys passed almost half their time in this domain,
2 I, I | indescribable peace.~After perhaps half an hour of this strange
3 I, II | those spasms of indignation, half real, half assumed, aroused
4 I, II | indignation, half real, half assumed, aroused at first
5 I, II | time the Countess, who was half asleep in an armchair, to
6 I, III| For the last six years half the men in Paris have been
7 I, III| bring forth a few leaves—half a dozen at most—then it
8 I, III| to Musadieu.~The Count, half convinced, annoyed to have
9 I, IV | Countess asked suddenly.~“Half after twelve.”~“Oh, let
10 I, IV | of an hour’s grace, then half an hour, and finally a whole
11 I, IV | had retired; it was as if half the charm that held him
12 II, I | that poor heart, of which half belongs to~me and which
13 II, I | childhood itself, which half~disappears, for our little
14 II, I | up the Boulevard, but in half an hour the Count suddenly
15 II, II | at the clock.~“Oh, it is half after eleven. You must go
16 II, II | showing her ankles and half way up to her knee when
17 II, II | In Paris one lives in the half shadow of apartments, where
18 II, IV | Cirque, then made an abrupt half turn, without motive, design,
19 II, VI | Theatre Lyrique, of its half success in the beginning
20 II, VI | singing each aria. Annette, half turned toward him, listened
21 II, VI | to bed.”~“Oh, come up for half an hour, and we’ll have
22 II, VI | mass of papers, already half consumed, twisting and turning
23 II, VI | his breast, his mouth was half opened by his short breath,
24 II, VI | regularly chimed the hour, the half hour, and the quarter, singing
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