Chap.

 1        1|         of sound, the orchestra struck up the small, lively notes
 2        1|     greeting for the public and struck up her grand ditty:~“When
 3        1|       and fro in a manner which struck the audience as unbecoming
 4        2|   francs!”~She wasnt vexed. It struck her as a joke that MEN should
 5        2|      Zoe seemed much impressed. Struck with a sudden admiration,
 6        2|        nothing. A happy thought struck her as very amusing; she
 7        3|        his attention. Its style struck him as crude, not to say
 8        3|   laughter sounded a note which struck Fauchery strangely, the
 9        3|      the only woman present who struck him as being the thing.
10        3|       dear boy.”~Eleven oclock struck. Assisted by her daughter,
11        3|        smiled as of old. Twelve struck slowly in the great solemn
12        4|      restaurant come to her. It struck her as being more the thing.
13        4|     changing his plate, her act struck him as very pretty and,
14        4|     Then an exasperating notion struck her. In behaving thus improperly
15        4|       on the door.~Five oclock struck. The dancing had ceased,
16        4|  stained it.~“Now the bargain’s struck,” said Nana gravely.~The
17        5|       his chest!”~He lunged and struck the young man with such
18        5|    embarrass him? He could have struck her. But in attempting to
19        5|      Why, the bargain was to be struck after the play was over!
20        5|     where row upon row of faces struck a pale, uncertain note,
21        6|      gardener back when an idea struck her. Zoe, who was unpacking
22        6|         a form of address which struck her as at once tender and
23        6|       liked to keep it since he struck her as a serious, practicable
24        6|       with kisses whenever they struck their bare feet against
25        6|         of exceptional size. It struck them as so amusing! But
26        6|       whole body of the clergy, struck them in the light of a comical
27        7|     strolling people. A thought struck him: if Nana were suspicious
28        7|        and nervous.~Ten oclock struck, and suddenly it occurred
29        7|  ornamentation and furnirure it struck a decidedly false note.
30        7|    notwithstanding this, he was struck by what he had read, for
31        7|      where it was, it doubtless struck her as both quaint and pretty.
32        7| handling! Besides, she had been struck by a laughable notion, and
33        7|       to the blaze a droll idea struck her, and like a goodtempered
34        7|        was falling. Two oclock struck at the Trinite. The Rue
35        7|     where he was.~Three oclock struck, then four, but he could
36        8|         s ten thousand. The sum struck them as a solid foundation
37        8|       got a baby already?”~This struck everybody as very droll,
38        8|         nice to be beaten if he struck the blow!~After that night
39        8|        on his fortune. Nana was struck and did her best to make
40        8|         solemnly, for the thing struck him as being quite in the
41        8|     expressions of surprise. It struck her as so queer, and yet
42        8|          These last were openly struck between group and group
43        8|   abroad. Nevertheless, she was struck by one thing: Labordette
44        8|      caresses. When two oclock struck the candle was still burning,
45        9|    looked vexed, and Mignon was struck at this and became serious
46        9|       in contemplation, when it struck her someone had knocked
47        9| blackguardly turn; well, and it struck me as horrid to begin in
48       10|     satisfied with this; it had struck her as “nohowish,” and she
49       10|     befall, that blows would be struck, that something abominable
50       10|         refrained. The business struck him as a failure. Nana fixed
51       10|       the curtains. One oclock struck. The Avenue de Villiers
52       11| enormous russet pigtail.~Twelve struck. The public would have to
53       11|   exquisitely ugly. All jockeys struck her as looking idiotic,
54       12|   conceal her plight. The thing struck her as a ridiculous accident,
55       12| expression at the garden, which struck her as immense. Presently
56       12|      desire to laugh. The thing struck him as comic.~“Aha, here
57       13|       before his mind’s eye. It struck him in the light of an incest.
58       13|        the traffic, for then he struck her as funny and cheered
59       13|   bloody pulp. But all that now struck him as insignificant. Nana
60       13|      nothing now, for her house struck her as ridiculous. It was
61       14|     face. The women were horrorstruck. They shuddered and escaped.~“
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