Chap.

 1        2|         standing in front of the window as she did so. She had the
 2        3| discussion in the embrasure of a window. Fauchery was left to himself
 3        4|     entered the dining room.~The window here had remained open.
 4        5|  whipping the panes of the great window that looked out on the courtyard,
 5        5|          then turned back to the window, outside which yawned the
 6        5|        bet they’ve just opened a window. Why, one might catch one’
 7        5|         that he had closed every window himself but suggested that
 8        5|        stairhead there was a low window which resembled a deep,
 9        6|         him, he slipped from the window to the ground with the assistance
10        6|       warmth, got up to open the window for a few minutes, and as
11        6|       come up, and as though the window bar had not been sufficiently
12        6|          an elder tree below the window.~“Wait one moment,” whispered
13        7|       salmon laid out inside the window.~At length he seemed to
14        7|          slipped from Mme Bron’s window and cast a yellow glare
15        7|   growing mildewed in its pot. A window fastening creaked, and the
16        7|       the show in a fan seller’s window.~“I say, that’s pretty,”
17        7|          anew before a jeweler’s window, “what a funny bracelet!”~
18        7|          s arm as they went from window to window among the fast–
19        7|         they went from window to window among the fast–diminishing
20        7|    belonging to a shop. The last window on the left was bisected
21        7|        shadows passed across the window, and the bright streak gleamed
22        7|       streak still traversed the window, and this time he was going
23        7|      turn his eyes away from the window, his anger changed into
24        7|    thereat, for now the darkened window ceased to interest him.
25        7|    upward from time to time. The window seemed a dead thing, and
26        8|       had watched for him at the window, how they had fallen out
27        8|         observing a light in the window. Fontan had come home in
28        8|   throwing six francs out of the window every day!~“Now to begin
29        8|          on the first floor, the window of which opened on the courtyard.
30        8|         about to jump out of the window. Luckily, however, the little
31        8|   hesitate; she stepped over the window prop, and with her chemise
32        8|        at the door, she shut the window like a goodnatured girl
33        9|      bright sunlight fell from a window and clove the shadow round
34        9|        sour that Nana opened the window and for some moments stayed
35        9|        of the count she shut the window, for it was not warm, and
36        9|       she withdrew as far as the window and then came swelling back
37        9|   cleanly things! She opened the window and, again leaning on the
38        9|        and, again leaning on the window sill, began watching the
39       10|    hangings helped to produce. A window, whose yellow– and rose40       10|          the background near the window, and lay waiting, silent
41       10|        sang. Then she ran to the window.~“Oh, just look at the figure
42       10|     leaned upon the wroughtiron window rail in the shadow of the
43       10|           who was then below the window, lifted her head and showed
44       10|     returning, and they shut the window. Turning round again, shivering,
45       11|      seen him escaping through a window. He had set fire to his
46       12|          throws money out of the window, too—”~“She does not only
47       12|      wind kept blowing through a window into the fresh twilight
48       12|          warm breeze swelled the window curtains, and children’s
49       13|         throw himself out of the window when an omnibus was passing.
50       13|          her through the bedroom window.~There was a sound of people
51       13|       leaning anxiously out of a window, and he shouted up to her
52       13|         knelt under some painted window and gave way to the intoxication
53       14|        gusts of wind swelled the window curtains. The window opened
54       14|         the window curtains. The window opened on the boulevard,
55       14|       suffocated, flung wide the window and leaned upon the sill.
56       14|         a capital view from this window!”~They all three leaned
57       14|         was again leaning out of window. She was alone now, and
58       14|      leaned her back against the window, and her face was very pale.~“
59       14|       Lucy, who was still at the window, leaned out and caught sight
60       14|           said Lucy, leaving the window open; “I promised to make
61       14|        drew a curtain across the window, and then it occurred to
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