Part, Chapter
1 I, I | slanting a little from left to right, which said:~“MONSIEUR:~“
2 I, II | placed a monocle on his right eye and left it there, as
3 I, III| thirtieth year. The child is right. You admire only passee
4 I, III| season, and that they were right in proclaiming them beautiful
5 I, III| flattered, murmured: “He is right; he speaks as an artist.
6 I, III| indifferently:~“Yes, you are right—it is ugly.”~Then she resumed
7 I, IV | he. “Let us begin at the right.”~They were just disappearing
8 I, IV | day.~“Let us begin at the right,” said he, “and we shall
9 I, IV | I really feel that I am right.”~“Why?”~“I do not know.”~“
10 I, IV | convince him that she was right, that she must judge accurately
11 I, IV | eating, extended in long rows right and left of a narrow passage,
12 I, IV | him, after all? Had he any right? Why should he wish to prevent
13 II, I | des Ambassadeurs is the right place.”~So they set out,
14 II, II | as well as the one on the right, without knowing, indeed,
15 II, II | the left or which on the right, which was mother, which
16 II, II | she thought. “I have no right to torment myself in this
17 II, III| prescription that will set you right again. But above all, you
18 II, III| iron garden-chair in the right light. He opened his bookcase
19 II, V | he may be, would have the right to find that word rather
20 II, VI | longer to have even the right to desire, to feel himself
21 II, VI | imbeciles, all-powerful only by right of birth and wealth.~Until
22 II, VI | I must walk.”~“That is right! Walk a great deal, walk
23 II, VI | whom it was a duty and a right. She would thereby simply
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