Chapter

 1        I|            were mistaken.”~ ~“Have you seen him?”~ ~“No, I have not
 2        I|                him?”~ ~“No, I have not seen him, but someone else has
 3        I|              him, but someone else has seen him for me, and has spoken
 4       II|               of France, who has never seen Sairmeuse nor the Oiselle.”~ ~
 5       II|                   Never had Marie-Anne seen her father in such a mood;
 6       II|                   Young dEscorval had seen, at the first glance, that
 7      III|           faint recollection of having seen him long ago, before ‘89
 8      III|               been.~ ~If some, who had seen Louis XVII. at the helm
 9        V|             the word.~ ~She was seldom seen at the Tuileries, where
10        V|            long time M. dEscorval had seen the prodigious edifice erected
11     VIII|              return, and have suddenly seen an impassable gulf open
12     VIII|                which Martial had never seen.~ ~Maurice saw the lights
13       IX|                agitated, he would have seen what a terrible effort this
14       XI|               heart which I have often seen degenerate into positive
15      XII|              Marie-Anne as he had just seen her, blushing and paling,
16      XII|       exercised.~ ~He had, it is true, seen this rival rudely dismissed
17     XIII|                 In fact, you must have seen her, this poor Marie-Anne,
18     XIII|             Sairmeuse?”~ ~“Yes, I have seen her, Mademoiselle,” replied
19     XIII|              stung her.~ ~“So you have seen the marquis, Marie-Anne?”~ ~“
20      XIV|            above all others.~ ~She had seen her father besieged by so
21      XIV|               Escorval’s breast had he seen the ferocity expressed on
22       XV|               son. Maurice was to have seen Marie-Anne to-day. What
23      XVI|              remember that he had ever seen the other, who was a young
24      XVI|              years since the baron had seen Lacheneur’s son.~ ~How time
25      XVI|              best of men.”~ ~“Have you seen him again?”~ ~“No; but I
26      XVI|              again?”~ ~“No; but I have seen his son. I have even been
27     XVII|                upon the threshold, had seen her approaching.~ ~There
28     XVII|                have shuddered had they seen him at that moment, so terrible
29    XVIII|               of vertigo.”~ ~“Have you seen Marie-Anne, father? Have
30      XIX|               Marquis de Sairmeuse had seen leaving Lacheneur’s house.~ ~
31      XIX|                pleased.”~ ~Had Martial seen the smile upon Chanlouineau’
32      XXI|                I am myself, if you had seen the light gleaming on the
33     XXII|             chancing to look back, had seen the lamps of Mlle. de Courtornieu’
34     XXIV|                say: ‘Here I am! I have seen and I know all.’”~ ~“But
35     XXIV|               Not one of you must have seen Mademoiselle Lacheneur.
36      XXV|              manner of the few persons seen upon the thoroughfare was
37     XXVI|         dropped these words:~ ~“I have seen Chanlouineau. Be of good
38    XXXII|             among themselves. “We have seen him on his knees, begging
39    XXXIV|              her that she had not been seen at the time of her father40     XXXV|               the old soldier, who had seen so many comrades fall by
41     XXXV|                such a way that you are seen everywhere.” All present
42    XXXVI|               his mouth closed. He has seen your money, and so long
43  XXXVIII|               after what you have just seen and heard you can no longer
44  XXXVIII|              wedded to-day.”~ ~“I have seen all this; but I must still
45    XXXIX|               it was not until she had seen him set off on a gallop
46       XL|                 at least, until I have seen Martial. Perhaps he is not
47      XLI|              fullest details.~ ~He had seen the two adversaries take
48      XLI|             this step.~ ~“You might be seen,” said he, “and who knows—
49     XLII|                fatal day whose sun had seen her a maiden, a wife, and
50     XLII|                  Quick! we must not be seen together. Conceal yourself.”~ ~
51     XLII|              know him well; have I not seen his cursed face before my
52     XLII|               impossible that you have seen the man of whom you speak.”~ ~
53     XLII|            Courtornieu supposed he had seen, Blanche knew only too well;
54     XLII|               is the reason why I have seen him again. I must rejoin
55     XLII|             well! she has been neither seen nor heard from. She must
56      XLV|              story above which she had seen illuminated by the trembling
57      XLV|                Courtornieu; no one had seen her leave the chateau; Aunt
58      XLV|                the house without being seen?~ ~“It must be that poison
59     XLVI|              pitiless.~ ~“You have not seen Martial! Tell me, then,
60    XLVII|                the house until we have seen her. She knows that very
61    XLVII| suspicious-looking characters had been seen prowling about, and that
62    XLVII|             friendship.~ ~They had not seen each other since the duel
63   XLVIII|             that very evening, had she seen the glance which her niece
64        L|                Chupin. Had he not been seen prowling around the Borderie
65        L|               What if some peasant had seen her with Chupin? What if
66       LI|              Aunt Medea—who have never seen myself in anything but shabby
67     LIII|                five oclock I have not seen~ you, I shall carry to the
68      LIV|              and felt no fear of being seen or recognized.~ ~And yet
69       LV|                purpose. A man, who had seen a rival, or rather, a future
Best viewed with any browser at 800x600 or 768x1024 on Tablet PC
IntraText® (VA2) - Some rights reserved by EuloTech SRL - 1996-2010. Content in this page is licensed under a Creative Commons License