IntraText Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library | Search |
Alphabetical [« »] wiser 1 wisest 1 wish 79 wished 40 wished-for 1 wishes 17 wishing 3 | Frequency [« »] 40 sound 40 sprang 40 true 40 wished 39 became 39 course 39 happened | Émile Gaboriau The honor of the name Concordances wished |
Chapter
1 II| been educated in Paris; he wished him to be fitted for any 2 II| in her father’s mind? She wished to know; and, leaving the 3 II| godmother, was dying, and wished to speak with me. I ran 4 VI| the duke’s nose if they wished him to confirm their titles 5 IX| fate uncomplainingly. I wished to see you once more, and 6 X| Ah! no one would have wished his existence at the price 7 X| satisfied his curiosity. He wished to see it in detail by daylight.~ ~ 8 XII| fellow whom the peasants wished to kill yesterday upon the 9 XIII| One might, perhaps, have wished her a trifle larger. But 10 XIII| friend; and because she wished at any cost to prevent a 11 XVI| to forget him, even if I wished to do so.”~ ~“And yet you 12 XVI| everything. I selected what I wished—furniture, clothing, linen. 13 XVII| visits to Marie-Anne, but she wished to see for herself.~ ~So, 14 XVIII| told the servant that he wished to speak to his father. 15 XVIII| in agony.~ ~M. d’Escorval wished to extinguish the last ray 16 XVIII| He said this because he wished to reassure his father; 17 XXII| announcing her coming.~ ~She wished her father to compel Lacheneur 18 XXII| alike unavailing. “They wished to see their way,” they 19 XXII| should disperse; others wished to march against Montaignac 20 XXIII| understood it all; and he wished that every ball had pierced 21 XXIII| There was a day when I wished either to kill myself or 22 XXIV| spirit; but I knew it—I wished him to succeed, because 23 XXIV| wretch that I was!—when I wished to attract to our ranks 24 XXIV| you understand now why I wished you to regard us as strangers? 25 XXV| was his son’s mistress, wished, at any cost, to prevent 26 XXVII| in advance, and yet they wished to hear a voice raised in 27 XXIX| the brave young girl. They wished to know what she was about 28 XXIX| pressing questions. They wished to accompany her, or, at 29 XXIX| condemned to death. The King wished to pardon him, but his ministers 30 XXXVI| their marriage public? She wished to do so, but Maurice entreated 31 XXXVII| separated from his wife, Maurice wished to confer with her, to give 32 XXXVIII| was to Marie-Anne that he wished this famous letter to be 33 XLII| they queried.~ ~Alas! she wished to forget it herself. She 34 XLII| to forget it herself. She wished to annihilate all recollection 35 XLIII| masculine habiliments.~ ~Chupin wished to irritate Mme. Blanche 36 XLV| could she ascertain what she wished to know? Ah! she saw but 37 XLVII| passion for Marie-Anne. He wished to make her his mistress. 38 XLVIII| turned the key.~ ~Aunt Medea wished to retire to her own room, 39 LII| much older than himself, he wished to marry her. Mme. Blanche 40 LIV| on the crowd.”~ ~And he wished to see.~ ~But Jean Lacheneur