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Alphabetical    [«  »]
seemed 96
seeming 2
seems 14
seen 59
sees 5
seigneurs 1
seize 2
Frequency    [«  »]
60 last
60 other
59 leave
59 seen
59 took
57 door
57 our
Alexandre Dumas, fils
Camille

IntraText - Concordances

seen

   Chapter
1 1 | rooms and furniture could be seen on the 13th and 14th. ~I 2 1 | extravagance seemed to be seen at its height. ~On a large 3 2 | himself conspicuous by being seen in their company, and as 4 2 | she chose to smile, was seen only by them, and a duchess 5 2 | piece she was certain to be seen, and she invariably had 6 2 | often went. She was never seen with any flowers but camellias. 7 3 | seemed, after what I had seen, the bed of her past), but 8 3 | blind man who has never seen the daylight, the deaf who 9 4 | francs. The girl had not seen her sister for six or seven 10 4 | tried to think where I had seen the name, and remembered 11 5 | to Marguerite, for I had seen and met her, I knew her 12 5 | gone." ~"And you have never seen him since?" ~"Never." ~I, 13 5 | Never." ~I, too, had not seen Armand again. I was beginning 14 6 | the cemetery." ~"You have seen the tomb?" ~I scarcely dared 15 6 | myself again until I have seen Marguerite. It is perhaps 16 6 | de Rance', after having seen, I will see." ~"I understand," 17 6 | at your service. Have you seen Julie Duprat?" ~"Yes, I 18 6 | and rose face that I had seen so often. ~Armand, unable 19 6 | corpse which we had just seen. He looked as if he had 20 7 | like so many visions I had seen, and I looked everywhere 21 7 | and said she had never seen any one so funny. But don' 22 7 | aside, and, without being seen, saw the two women pass 23 8 | curtain went up. I have often seen Marguerite at the theatre. 24 8 | showrooms, which we had never seen, and of which she seemed 25 8 | ourselves so as not to be seen from outside. ~"I have been 26 8 | was then just as you have seen it since. A young man was 27 10| troubled by what I have just seen." ~"You are very good! What 28 10| that ever since I have seen you, I know not why, you 29 10| to-day, after not having seen you for two years, you made 30 11| ridiculous the first time she had seen me? ~It is true that there 31 11| G., whose portrait I had seen and whom Prudence had indicated 32 11| seeing Prudence, "have you seen the duke?" ~"Yes, indeed." ~" 33 12| pettish here because you have seen a man in my box." ~"It is 34 12| very sadly after having seen Prudence, the count, and 35 13| the best families I have seen quite ready to do what I 36 14| hoped in my servant. He had seen no one since I went out. ~ 37 14| she was most often to be seen: to the Vaudeville, the 38 15| of all I would not have seen the count the day before 39 16| travelled a good deal, and seen much grander things, but 40 16| people whom we had never seen and who had no concern with 41 17| whom he did not wish to be seen. This came about through 42 17| Marguerite. ~"Well, I have seen the duke." ~"What did he 43 17| extravagances. Any one who had seen us leaving the house to 44 19| she said to me: "Have you seen Prudence?" ~"No." ~"You 45 19| house that I had never even seen. All that I knew was that 46 19| her furniture. You have seen by the amount taken at the 47 20| all the same, as if I had seen nothing in his face, embraced 48 21| your father?" ~"I have not seen him. I do not know what 49 22| Not a vehicle was to be seen on the road. The half hour 50 23| a woman whom I had never seen. ~As she passed me she turned 51 23| that purpose was. ~If I had seen Marguerite unhappy, if, 52 23| all the same. As you have seen, he has repurchased her 53 23| professed to I should have seen in this new and turbulent 54 23| This Olympe whom I had seen was, if not a friend of 55 23| whom she was most often seen since her return to Paris. 56 24| embassy, whom I had sometimes seen at Marguerite's, that the 57 26| compromise himself if he were seen with me. He introduced me 58 26| no doubt. He will have seen her die twice. His back 59 26| she will go, if God has seen the ordeal of her life and


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