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| Alphabetical [« »] hurried 11 hurriedly 3 hurt 4 husband 72 husbands 4 hush 3 huskily 1 | Frequency [« »] 73 terrible 73 those 72 asked 72 husband 72 left 72 long 72 soon | Émile Gaboriau Baron Trigault's Vengeance IntraText - Concordances husband |
Chapter
1 1,1| would never allow her worthy husband to see. ~"What would you 2 1,1| For she belonged, like her husband, to a very respectable family, 3 1,1| misfortune. Vantrasson, my husband, accompanied me, and while 4 1,2| whom she spoke of, whom her husband recognized, can be none 5 2,2| or the patience of the husband who was undoubtedly going 6 2,2| baroness, thanks to her husband's gold and the condescension 7 2,2| other sources than their husband's cash-box." ~When M. Van 8 2,3| cause of difference between husband and wife than this bill 9 2,3| Baroness Trigault, whose husband has an income of seven or 10 2,4| should be a very strange husband indeed, if I wasn't proud 11 2,4| t trouble me if I had a husband who knew how to make them 12 2,4| the door to prevent her husband from leaving her. "Ah! well, 13 2,4| energetically denied her husband's charges. She swore that 14 2,4| this? She commanded her husband to speak more plainly - 15 2,5| left for her to brave! Her husband is the companion of actresses 16 2,5| evening I learned that the husband and wife, my daughter and 17 2,5| on her knees before her husband. What a mistake! The tone 18 3,3| charming young lady, whose husband had gone to tempt fortune 19 3,3| less than a year after her husband's departure, she gave birth 20 3,3| Marguerite. But then why had the husband gone to America?" ~"Yes," 21 3,3| wrote: 'We are lost! My husband is at Marseilles: he will 22 3,3| late. On hearing of her husband's return, the young wife 23 3,4| resumed his narrative. "The husband was incontestably an artless 24 3,4| soon discovered that her husband knew everything, and she 25 3,4| Argeles's friend, and the husband who for ten long years had 26 3,4| haunted by the thought of the husband he had wronged. He felt 27 3,4| had discovered that the husband had become discouraged and 28 3,4| fated to have no peace. The husband had scarcely ceased to torment 29 3,4| which would surely set her husband upon the track, sooner or 30 3,4| confess everything to her husband." ~"The count was a patient 31 3,4| he bought it. This lady's husband must either be very poor 32 6,4| nothing can break, and my husband is a scoundrel. You would 33 6,4| my brother's fortune - my husband would instantly appear with 34 6,5| fortune independent of your husband." ~"Alas! I made inquiries 35 7,5| woman - - " ~"Bah!" ~"And my husband - your father - is not dead. 36 8,2| had improvised it, as her husband had improvised his title 37 8,3| hair - amazed to see her husband deport himself in this style, 38 8,4| only eleven days after her husband's death; and she allowed 39 8,4| nun. She will never find a husband if she remains at home - 40 9,6| reasoning that has cost many a husband dear! ~On her side, Madame 41 10,6| thing about it is that this husband and wife should write to 42 11,1| fellow and wanted him for her husband; her father, who could refuse 43 11,1| from him - it's from my husband; from Paul. Come, come!" ~ 44 11,2| the other. Deserted by her husband, Madame Paul had at last 45 11,2| instituted a search for her husband, and, having found him, 46 11,2| and that she adored her husband even to madness. Had this 47 11,2| were acquainted with her husband's present life, how did 48 11,2| be driven to denounce her husband in the presence of his fashionable 49 11,2| renounce all hope of my husband's return. Whatever happens, 50 11,5| intention of becoming your husband; and to attain that object 51 11,5| this claim if he became my husband?" ~"Certainly he could." ~ 52 11,5| fathers-in-law are deceived, or the husband, or the wife, and sometimes 53 12,1| a saint, and I loved my husband; what some people call duty 54 12,1| win a fortune for her. The husband who exposes his honor and 55 12,1| The baroness knew that her husband adored her, and hearing 56 12,2| mentioned her name. The husband in particular seemed to 57 14,2| de la Ville l'Eveque, the husband of that extremely stylish 58 14,3| give our attention to the husband. So it was the baron who 59 15,3| to woman: To follow thy husband thou shalt abandon all else, 60 15,3| myself that this was the husband whom my heart had instinctively 61 15,3| the man whom I called my husband: and, without being really 62 15,6| authorized it, owing to my husband's absence. All these proofs 63 18,1| his wife from home. The husband had to show his horses; 64 18,5| the woman who, while her husband was braving death to win 65 18,5| never shed a tear over her husband's sufferings. She was sure 66 18,5| house portended. Since her husband brought this young girl - 67 18,5| ignorant of the fact that her husband had disposed of his immense 68 18,5| they contain. I hated my husband; I loved the Count de Chalusse 69 19,4| thousands of times that neither husband nor wife should ever have 70 20,1| consequence of a quarrel with her husband, Madame Trigault had left 71 20,3| by his daughter and her husband, separated from his wife, 72 20,3| from her son. As for her husband, she supposes he is dead