Part
1 I| them were scratching with one claw in search of worms,
2 I| driven by a man as tall as one's finger.~She took up a
3 I| a bound. It was Jacques, one of the farm laborers, a
4 I| thought of it, while he, with one fixed idea in his head,
5 I| between them. They plagued one another in corners; they
6 I| most carefully. At last, one night, when every one in
7 I| last, one night, when every one in the farmhouse was asleep,
8 I| fear of creating a scandal. One morning, however, she saw
9 II| what she was doing, with one fixed idea in her head:~"
10 II| always to be watching her.~One morning the postman brought
11 II| as she had never received one in her life before she was
12 II| confide her secret to any one. She often stopped in her
13 II| persuaded him to get rid of one servant girl, who had become
14 II| disgraceful; but, at last, one day, when the farmer was
15 II| its point in the air, in one, and a piece of bread in
16 III| for in the country every one is very nearly equal; the
17 III| began to imagine that some one bad cast a spell over her,
18 III| as they heard her pass; one even jumped over the ditch,
19 III| He pulled off the leeches one by one, applied herbs to
20 III| pulled off the leeches one by one, applied herbs to the wounds,
21 III| he had hit upon the right one, and every moment wiped
22 III| together as man and wife, and one morning he said to her: "
23 IV| roughly, almost angrily.~One day, when a neighbor's boy
24 V| day forward she had only one thought: to have a child
25 V| leagues off, and so Vallin one day drove off to consult
26 V| choking with rage, until one night, not being able to
27 V| had a child, I have had one! I had it by Jacques; you
28 V| said: "I wanted to adopt one, and now we have found one.
29 V| one, and now we have found one. I asked the cure about
|