Part, Chapter
1 I, I | gleamed like flame. Peace and sleep seemed imprisoned there,
2 I, I | trifling! As long as you sleep well and have an appetite
3 I, I | laugh.~“And if I lose my sleep and no longer eat?”~“Let
4 I, I | her bed, to see no one, to sleep and forget. Having shut
5 I, I | Then she would suffer; her sleep would be tortured by doubts.
6 I, III| the comfortable posture of sleep.~“Well, what shall we do
7 I, III| them.~“I should like to sleep here a little longer,” replied
8 I, III| healthful fatigue, and went to sleep with agreeable anticipation
9 II, I | overcome by the fatigue of this sleep in a hot bath, and for an~
10 II, I | nauseated, and go home to try to sleep a~little until the hour
11 II, II | the only one that went to sleep at once.~The next morning,
12 II, III| walk as much as you can. Sleep a good deal and grow a little
13 II, IV | awakened after years of sleep. If he had loved the young
14 II, IV | divan! But no, he should not sleep; he should only agitate
15 II, IV | gone to bed he felt that sleep would not come to him, for
16 II, V | soul still slept with the sleep of youth.~He, on the other
17 II, V | was in bed she could not sleep; she would light a candle
18 II, VI | stupor. Hoping that he would sleep, she sat down again beside
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