Chapter

 1        I|      Sairmeuse arrived here last night in a post-chaise, with his
 2       II|       carry it to your home. The night is very dark, and no one
 3       II|         the evening, and for the night a bundle of straw. I could
 4     VIII|      hands, looking out into the night.~ ~There was no moon, but
 5     VIII|       There was no moon, but the night was clear, and over beyond
 6     VIII|      passed the remainder of the night in thinking over what he
 7       IX|       that had fallen during the night.~ ~“If I have come,” she
 8       IX|     pausing to look back. Before night we shall have passed the
 9        X|         little and poorly on the night following his return, or
10        X|   flitted through his brain that night!~ ~He beheld himself the
11      XII|         is delightful, the first night, not so pleasant on the
12       XV|      whatever hour of the day or night parishioners came to ask
13       XV|        thoughts.~ ~How long that night seemed to M. dEscorval
14      XVI|         come here again—never—by night or by day, or under any
15    XVIII|       You must come here only at night, and then only at hours
16      XIX|        the grove on the Reche.~ ~Night was falling, but it was
17    XXIII|       displayed on that terrible night will never be really known.~ ~
18     XXIV|       with cold sweat.~ ~“What a night!” she murmured. “What a
19     XXIV|            she murmured. “What a night!”~ ~“I must remind you,
20     XXIV|        about at this hour of the night will awaken suspicion at
21     XXIV|          in the stillness of the night, and then the corporal gave
22      XXV|          know what happened last night? There was powder enough
23     XXVI|          journey of the previous night; the other two were in Montaignac.~ ~
24     XXVI|        these ladies to travel at night, and unattended, on the
25     XXVI|       and dread through the long night which seemed to them eternal.~ ~
26    XXVII|          in the rebellion on the night of the fourth.”~ ~“Are you
27   XXVIII|       that dazzled me! From that night I gave body, soul, and fortune
28   XXVIII|       and in the darkness of the night, was terrible. They attacked
29     XXIX|          We have, then, only the night before us,” resumed the
30      XXX|       There was no moon; but the night was very clear, and they
31      XXX|      terrific cry rent the still night air.~ ~M. dEscorval was
32     XXXI|        upon the threshold.~ ~The night was very dark, and a chilling
33     XXXI|          have been captured last night in my house, but he ran
34     XXXI|        are we going to spend the night here?”~ ~An implacable hatred
35     XXXI|          detachment to spend the night at Saint-Pavin, as had been
36    XXXII|       the agony of that terrible night which precedes the day of
37    XXXII|         him in the middle of the night to tell him the great news.~ ~
38    XXXII|       the drama of the preceding night.~ ~He was soon obliged to
39    XXXII|    Escorval.”~ ~“He escaped last night.”~ ~“Ah! now I shall die
40   XXXIII|      were on guard that eventful night were interrogated. One of
41   XXXIII|        on the second floor.~ ~At night he barricaded the doors,
42   XXXIII|      They did not succeed.~ ~One night a courier arrived at Montaignac,
43     XXXV|      from this ledge, at dead of night, was perilous in the extreme.~ ~
44     XXXV|       litter at this hour of the night, and in this neighborhood?”~ ~“
45     XXXV|        him his perplexities. The night of the revolt he had given
46    XXXVI|        under his clothing on the night of the revolt.~ ~“Eh! we
47   XXXVII|         what is needful.”~ ~When night came, he put on a long blue
48   XXXVII|          been discovered.~ ~That night the abbe hazarded a cruel
49   XXXVII|        after quite a comfortable night, seemed to regain consciousness.~ ~
50   XXXVII|         frontier again this very night.”~ ~Jean Lacheneur, who
51  XXXVIII|          a fool! Let them have a night to calm themselves. I will
52  XXXVIII|         where should he pass the night? He was in evening dress
53  XXXVIII|         to Montaignac during the night to procure from a retired
54  XXXVIII|           He sent the order last night. We have been hidden in
55       XL|          the prospect of another night of suspense, which was almost
56      XLI|  re-cross the frontier that same night.~ ~Abbe Midon had decided
57      XLI|         deny it!” he exclaimed. “Night before last, when you entered
58      XLI|      might go to the Borderie at night,” suggested Marie-Anne, “
59      XLI|        to the frontier that very night; there she would take the
60      XLI|      Chanlouineau’s house—alone! Night came on and a great terror
61     XLII|   poaching and stealing. Day and night he rambles through the woods
62    XLIII|    Escorval had given her on the night of the insurrection, when
63    XLIII|         to sleep in the woods at night. What game is he hunting?
64     XLIV|          No one was there!~ ~The night was dark, and she could
65     XLIV|       her long absence.~ ~It was night, but Marie-Anne, fortunately,
66     XLIV|       with other articles.~ ~The night was very dark, and Marie-Anne,
67      XLV|           Alone, and on foot, at night——”~ ~“I am in a hurry, aunt,”
68      XLV|    likely to meet someone.~ ~The night was still, but very dark,
69      XLV|      clump of lilacs, the entire night if necessary.~ ~For two
70     XLVI|        the deep stillness of the night.~ ~In the garden below Aunt
71     XLVI|          was revived by the cool night air.~ ~“I wish to walk,”
72    XLVII|   collected and packed; and when night came, Poignot’s son began
73    XLVII| Lacheneur; “and it happened last night, for the blood has not had
74    XLVII|               She died only last night,” replied Jean.~ ~Maurice
75    XLVII|            Maurice rose.~ ~“Last night?” said he. “In that case,
76   XLVIII|        side.~ ~On and after that night Aunt Medea took her revenge
77     XLIX|      instituted at once, and all night long twenty men, bearing
78     XLIX|       search. From morning until night the mother and son toiled
79        L|         it was the same the next night, and the night following
80        L|          the next night, and the night following that, and always
81        L|          and the terrors of each night were augmented by the terrors
82        L|        same fear seized her when night appeared with its cortege
83        L|       attributed her tortures at night to the disquietude she suffered
84       LI|       niece,” from morning until night; and the gossips of the
85       LI|        alone he would travel all night.~ ~“Do so now,” said Blanche,
86       LI|     fatigued in the least, and a night of travel does not appall
87       LI|              They did travel all night, and the next day, about
88      LII|        hours, morning, noon, and night, without troubling himself
89      LII|        degraded of beings.~ ~One night he was arrested in a low
90       LV|    decided wisely, for that same night he leaped his own garden-wall,
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