Chap.

 1        1|    themselves. Through the three open gates might have been observed,
 2        1|          his fine eyes very wide open and his fair face glowing
 3        1|       the box must have remained open, for the Marquis de Chouard,
 4        2|          well–dressed man pushed open the door and bowed. Just
 5        2|     Nevertheless, she ran off to open the door. Returning presently,
 6        2|      once more she had to go and open the door.~“Here’s bothers!”
 7        2|        She forbade Zoe to go and open the door, but the latter
 8        2|          movement, and under her open dressing jacket her neck
 9        2|         fivefranc pieces on her open palm and offered it to the
10        2|           shouting:~“I refuse to open the door any more. They’
11        3|   armchair, dozing with his eyes open. But when one of the young
12        3|         Hugon was falling asleep openeyed. Lost among the petticoats,
13        4|         window here had remained open. Two lamps illuminated the
14        4|       Daguenet looking out of an open door and beckoning to him.
15        4|    thought him so funny with his open mouth and his nose moving
16        5|       greenroom doors stood wide open to the corridor leading
17        5|     Mignon and had presented his open snuffbox to him. This proffer
18        5|       man who had hurried out to open it beneath the gaslight
19        5|      under his feet. Through the open sockets gas was descried
20        5|         queen of love, in act to open her most private palace
21        5|        One day in passing a halfopen door he had caught sight
22        5|     silences.~“There’s something open,” said Nana sharply, and
23        5|  Highness. But she kept her ears open notwithstanding, for she
24        5|           glanced through a halfopen door and saw a very dirty
25        5|      more little peep through an open loophole. The room was empty,
26        5|         Panoramas, had made them open the corridor which led from
27        6|          heavy warmth, got up to open the window for a few minutes,
28        6|       seemed to be sleeping with open eyes and a vague smile on
29        6|        dizzy with her day in the open air and intoxicated by the
30        6|      merrymaking issued from the open windows and died out far
31        6|       than ever. Toward the fair open country they went, amid
32        7|         flame and burning in the open. And the motley displays
33        7|         blown in whiffs from the open doors of the perfumers.
34        7|         to sleep with their eyes open.~“Oh, what a duck!” continued
35        7|      door of which a waiter held open, when from a neighboring
36        7|     house door at Nana’s was not open as yet, and he had to wait
37        7|        second person singular in open mockery of the count.~“What—
38        8|       knock at my door, and I’ll open it to you.”~Soon money began
39        8|         been sent forth into the open street. Till eleven at night
40        8|     alive, the only market still open to nocturnal bargains. These
41        8|          just as in the wide and open corridor of a disorderly
42        9|        he had peeped through the open doors and noticed the utter
43       10|         simple: the house door’s open! There now, you must take
44       10|  defiance of the laws of sex, in open contempt for the male portion
45       10|          fallen handkerchief, an open book, lay scattered about,
46       10|         room, through the widely open door of which you caught
47       11|        and dumb and white in the open air. Meanwhile the young
48       11|        crackings of whips in the open. When the sun, amid bursts
49       11| Labordette was getting out of an open carriage where Gaga, Clarisse
50       11|         bookmakers, who stood in open carriages gesticulating
51       11|          and two gentlemen in an open carriage, Louise Violaine
52       11|       more animated than before. Openair lunches were arranged
53       11|        massed, and in the blithe open air their bright colors
54       11|          parade of people in the open galleries of the grandstands!
55       11|          trees there was a round open enclosure, where, forming
56       11|        news of Louiset, whom the open air had upset. A long story,
57       12|     though she had left the door open. When he had lain down again
58       12|        was lying awake with wideopen, meditative eyes. She smiled
59       12|      seem to insist. She did not open her eyes again, and, seeing
60       12|        it had become possible to open the two doors of the great
61       12|           in front of one of the open windows, was playing a waltz,
62       12|         its lively airs. Through open doors ranges of seated ladies
63       13|        room, when the doors were open. It was a long story: Georges
64       13|           All the doors remained open, as the servants noisily
65       13|        door, which remained wide open opposite. And in her terror
66       13|         doors of the house stood open, but as she mounted to the
67       13|       water spread their nets in open daylight and flaunted themselves
68       13|      Muffat did not dare to push open a door, to pull a curtain
69       13|       shall slap his face in the open street.”~For an hour Labordette
70       13|         he was simply content to open the windows for a second
71       13|        its door. Outside, in the open air of the street, he would
72       13|        contours. Seeing the door open, he had risen up, smitten
73       14|         Lucy, leaving the window open; “I promised to make you
74       14|       other, which remained half open, looked like a deep, black,
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