Chap.

 1        1|     public, peculiar to first nights and never subject to change,
 2        1|       re good for two hundred nights,” La Faloise said to him
 3        6|     surely she had dreamed of nights like this at an epoch which
 4        6|     even than on the previous nights. Whenever she had drunk
 5        7|      dawn that follows winter nights and looks so melancholy
 6        8|      stormy summer of burning nights. The pair used to start
 7        8|      their state was. On such nights it was as though a fit of
 8        9|      an evening for a hundred nights! Why not a country house
 9       10|    drawing room on those gala nights when she received society
10       10|     drives in the Bois, first nights at the theater, dinners
11       12|     From time to time she had nights such as these, during which
12       12|   would give the countess the nights not passed with her. She
13       12|     to the warmth of the June nights, it had become possible
14       13|       other—memories of merry nights at La Mignotte, of amorous
15       13|    terrors of their sleepless nights were now transforming themselves
16       14|    she’s already passed three nights there and is free to die
17       14| cheeks rendered pale by three nights of watching. She felt stupid
Best viewed with any browser at 800x600 or 768x1024 on Tablet PC
IntraText® (VA1) - Some rights reserved by EuloTech SRL - 1996-2009. Content in this page is licensed under a Creative Commons License