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| Alphabetical [« »] become 21 becomes 10 becoming 5 bed 42 bed-curtains 1 bedabble 1 bedpost 1 | Frequency [« »] 43 francs 43 morning 43 paris 42 bed 42 days 42 gold 42 marquis | Honoré de Balzac The Magic Skin IntraText - Concordances bed |
Chapter
1 1| the Flood are turned up in bed after bed and layer upon 2 1| are turned up in bed after bed and layer upon layer of 3 1| cure was found dead in his bed in the morning. . . ." ~" 4 2| in the morning and be in bed by nine at night. He meant 5 2| tiles. There was room for a bed, a table, and a few chairs, 6 2| which I wrote, my piano, bed, and armchair, the odd wall-paper 7 2| softened light fell upon the bed under its canopy of muslin 8 2| misfortunes. I went hungry to bed, muttering ludicrous imprecations, 9 2| its cresses, its gravel bed and flowers to become first 10 2| rather myself have carried my bed thither than have begged 11 2| her mother had gone to bed. I flung a stealthy glance 12 2| stealthy glance over the bed; the curtains were drawn 13 2| quite alone, looked at the bed, and heaved a great sigh, 14 2| sconce that hung before the bed, while her mistress sat 15 2| warming-pan, turned down the bed, and helped to lay her mistress 16 2| went to the foot of the bed, and gazed at her with feelings 17 2| night at the foot of your bed without ' ~" 'Monsieur ' 18 2| clock. Allow me to go to bed.' ~" 'And in two hours' 19 2| mingled, on the walls, the bed, and everywhere. You might 20 3| clock precisely, to go to bed. At any time in the day 21 3| disport themselves round my bed of death, and dance about 22 3| servant, as soon as he lay in bed, "give me half a drop of 23 3| thrown carelessly upon the bed, revealed a change of fortune. ~" 24 3| good taste. I will have a bed like yours to-morrow." ~ 25 3| tobacco-pipe. He spread a bed of clay over the surface 26 3| turn his face towards the bed; he saw Pauline's face through 27 3| said she. "Doesn't the bed belong to me, to me who 28 3| freak." ~She sprang out of bed like a kitten, showed herself 29 3| left at a distance from the bed. A nightingale came to perch 30 3| the dying keep to their bed of neglect, and age sit 31 3| must now either take to his bed or leave the baths. The 32 3| on, "I shall send him to bed for a month; eh, doctor?" ~" 33 3| ends at the foot of the bed; and this countryside was 34 3| One morning he had lain in bed till noon, deep in the dreams 35 3| shall find him dead in his bed some morning. He is every 36 3| however, drove him out of bed at length, and he appeared 37 3| came and found Raphael in bed. ~"Can you prescribe a draught 38 3| I only wish to be out of bed for an hour at most." ~" 39 3| evening he would leave his bed, with no very clear consciousness 40 3| of hunger and return to bed immediately. One dull blighted 41 3| sleeping draught, and went to bed. ~"The devil!" cried Jonathan, 42 3| lamplight, sitting upon the bed; Pauline grown fairer yet