Chap.

 1        1|             was now very severe and spoke of taste and morals. Farther
 2        1|             elbows on the table and spoke to him at close quarters.~“
 3        2|        would come tomorrow.”~As she spoke Zoe, the lady’s maid, opened
 4        2|          softly about the room. She spoke of yesterday’s great hit.
 5        2|          served as lady’s maid. Zoe spoke of these ladies as one who
 6        2|        would make them wait. As she spoke the electric bell sounded.
 7        2|           lowering her voice as she spoke. “I’ve put HIM in the little
 8        2|         room.”~Thereupon Mme Maloir spoke about the banker to Mme
 9        3|            With that the whole room spoke of Count Bismarck, and opinions
10        3|             in–law. In society some spoke of her as a woman of religious
11        3|            of the hearth, they both spoke in subdued tones, and, seeing
12        3|           Monsieur de Bismarck? You spoke with him once?”~He got up
13        3|    suggestive of being in a church, spoke as plainly as words could
14        3|    arguments urged by Fauchery, who spoke of a dinner where the Prince
15        3|         walls. It was then Fauchery spoke of departure. Yet he once
16        4|           paid her a compliment and spoke of his cousin, hiding his
17        4|       blinked and wavered while she spoke of the business of settling
18        4|      Stewart. Whereupon Rose Mignon spoke of the shah’s diamonds.
19        4|         histories. Blanche de Sivry spoke of her grandfather, the
20        4|        origin and of her own accord spoke of her childhood and of
21        5|             of devout enjoyment. He spoke in his turn.~“Could not
22        5|           disgusted by the men. She spoke in violent terms of the
23        6|            the morning the gardener spoke to us about it.”~Georges
24        6|            Oh, Mother, the gardener spoke without knowing anything
25        6|       Toward the close of August he spoke of October. Nana was furious
26        6|       between Paris and Orleans she spoke of nothing else; her eyes
27        6|          direction of the house and spoke of making up a roaring fire.~“
28        6|              She took his hands and spoke very familiarly in order
29        6|         boyseducation. Indeed, he spoke to them of Parmentier!~Dinner
30        7|             be amused at last as he spoke. Only he kept choosing his
31        7|             do to be that! Yet if I spoke the word I could be rich
32        7|            drive them out. Nay, she spoke to them in the most sensible
33        8|        Thereupon Francis smiled and spoke instead of her. As to Monsieur
34        8|            with bowed head while he spoke to her with a pained expression,
35        8|     occupied her thoughts. She even spoke about it to Fontan and again
36        8|          Satin showed annoyance and spoke up for Mme Robert’s strict
37        8|            little cry escape as she spoke, and Satin, who was stuffing
38        8|             five pages long, and he spoke therein of “the delicious
39        8|            voice became audible; he spoke slowly and rather unctuously
40        8|           been grossly insulted and spoke of bringing an action against
41        9|        appropriate action, and they spoke in even tones so as not
42        9|          said Bordenave at last. He spoke in his usual voice and was
43        9|          nodding his assent as Nana spoke. He was calmer now but as
44        9|        continued them, that he even spoke of settling money on her—
45        9|           in front of the count and spoke with quiet directness.~“
46        9|          smiled a queer smile which spoke as plainly as words. Muffat
47       10|          kiss his sweet darling. He spoke of living at her side in
48       10|          woman’s heart at once. She spoke kindly, and when the other
49       10|            over. By and by, when he spoke of going to bed, she sank
50       11|         like! It was just funny! He spoke to me about the count, about
51       11|      thought very much in the swim, spoke of them all as sorry jades.
52       11|              Some laughed at it and spoke of the pretty doing awaiting
53       11|         frightened her the night he spoke of burning himself and his
54       11|         crossed over the course she spoke low and familiarly.~“I say,
55       11|             of talk, and people all spoke at once.~“Lusignan’s too
56       11|      shortening of the odds. People spoke of his having laid two thousand
57       12|          grew tender toward him and spoke frankly about the child,
58       12|          excellent advice. She even spoke of God, and the count thought
59       13|         stay shut up in his room he spoke of having a sick headache.
60       13|            her intimates she always spoke thus of Count Muffat, and
61       13|          design of which she as yet spoke to no one.~At times, however,
62       13|           circumspect, and when she spoke of Rose it was as “poor
63       13|         insisted with his offer and spoke of the risks run in the
64       13|             known how he died. Some spoke of a wound reopening, others
65       14|           it very fine, indeed, and spoke of enlisting. When the enemy
66       14|          since. Directly Labordette spoke about it he came there with
67       14| contemplation and neither moved nor spoke. Perhaps they would be able
68       14|         this. She was a patriot and spoke of following the army.~“
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