Part, Chapter
1 I, I | free and active life of the country to the cloistered life of
2 I, I | Guilleroy had given her in the country two governesses, with unexceptionable
3 I, I | Guilleroy, wife of a Normandy country squire, agriculturist and
4 I, II | triumphant arguments of a country curate who would demonstrate
5 I, III| from far away, from the country that was hardly awake as
6 II, I | little trips around the country, and I insisted that he
7 II, I | with life, animated by the country~air and the excursion she
8 II, I | much better than in the country!”~“And I,” Bertin replied, “
9 II, II | the distant sounds of the country, swept in immediately through
10 II, II | the city streets and the country lanes.~The Countess ceased
11 II, II | in this heat, while the country is delicious. Heavens! how
12 II, II | You never used to like the country until now,” the Countess
13 II, II | a great island, and the country round about like a sea hidden
14 II, II | first train, to quit the country, where one could see too
15 II, II | settled her bills in the country, gave her final instructions,
16 II, III| dazzling glare that bathed the country remained in her like an
17 II, III| had assailed her in the country reappeared. They took a
18 II, IV | have just returned from the country,” he explained.~All those
19 II, IV | winter, they thought the country a bore. As Rocdiane would
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