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aliathatd��e{311}barom��eheraft��he turned to leave the room, looking round it once more, even as last friday norah had looked round his office, knowing that she would not see it again. there was nothing here that belonged to the life that stretched in front of him: all was part of the past. the most he could do was to exercise the fortitude he had enjoined on alice, and banish from sight the material things round which, close as the tendrils of ivy, were twined the associations of what he had missed. all that his books had to say to him was pitched in the tones of the voice that he must remember as little as possible, for now if he opened one and read, it was norah whom he heard reading. she filled the room....��iilamarquise��ilyandcour��irofthewig��dkeeling.w��n��thed��mejaim��dtheshutter��g,butth��ontbegi��
��[144]����david turned pale, made his escape, and for a long time would not go to the house for fear of meeting her. [49] she was afterwards told by gros that david would like to go and see her, but her silence expressed her refusal. soon after the return of mme. le brun, napoleon sent m. denon to order from her the portrait of his sister, caroline murat. she did not like to refuse, although the price given (1,800 francs) was less than half what she usually got, and caroline murat was so insufferable that it made the process a penance. she appeared with two maids, whom she wanted to do her hair while she was being painted. on being told that this was impossible, she consented to dismiss them, but she kept mme. le brun at paris all the summer by her intolerable behaviour. she was always changing her dress or coiffure, which had to be painted out and done over again. she was never punctual, and often did not come at all, when she had made the appointment; she was continually wanting alterations and giving so much trouble, that one day mme. le brun remarked to m. denon, loudly enough for her to hear������all the preliminaries were arranged by the families without anything being said upon the subject to the proposed bride, nor probably to the bridegroom either, and when everything was settled it was decided that now nothing was left to do but ��to consult the personal inclinations of the young [192] people,�� in preparation for which pauline was informed in one of the usual family councils of her approaching introduction to her fianc��.��japanese lady coming from the bath. japanese lady coming from the bath.����
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