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  1. 9 mar 2009 · Book digitized by Google from the library of Oxford University and uploaded to the Internet Archive by user tpb. Reprint of the 1900 ed. published by G. Barrie, Philadelphia, which was issued as v. 1. of The masterpieces of George Sand. Addeddate.

  2. Téléchargez gratuitement le roman Indiana de George Sand, une auteure française du XIXe siècle. Lisez l'histoire d'une jeune femme qui fuit son mari violent et se réfugie dans un château de la Brie.

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  3. 12 ott 2020 · 63445. Release Date. Oct 12, 2020. Copyright Status. Public domain in the USA. Downloads. 279 downloads in the last 30 days. Project Gutenberg eBooks are always free! Free kindle book and epub digitized and proofread by volunteers.

  4. 14 ott 2011 · Indiana by Sand, George, 1804-1876. Publication date 1993 Publisher New York : Signet Classic Collection ... Pdf_module_version 0.0.20 Ppi 643 ...

    • Part First
    • Part Second
    • Part Third

    II

    The two personages whom we have mentioned, IndianaDelmare and Sir Ralph, or, if you prefer, MonsieurRodolphe Brown, continued to face each other, as calmand cold as if the husband were standing between them.The Englishman had no idea of justifying himelf, andMadame Delmare realized that she had no serious groundsfor reproaching him, for he had spoken with no evilintention. At last, making an effort, she broke the silenceand upbraided him mildly. "That was not well done of you, my dear Ralph,"...

    III

    "You may be reassured, monsieur," said Indiana; "the man you killed will be quite well in a few days; at least we hope so, although he is not yet able to talk." "That's not the question, madame," said the colonel, in a voice that trembled with suppressed passion; "I insist upon knowing the name of this interesting patient of yours, and how it came about that he mistook the wall of my park for the avenue to my house." "I have absolutely no idea," replied Madame Delmare with such a cold and hau...

    IV

    You will find it difficult to believe perhaps that Monsieur de Ramière, a young man of brilliant intellect, considerable talents and many estimable qualities, accustomed to salon triumphs and to adventures in perfumed boudoirs, had conceived a very durable passion for the housekeeper in the household of a small manufacturer in Brie. And yet Monsieur de Ramière was neither fop nor libertine. We have said that he was intelligent–that is to say, he appreciated the advantages of birth at their re...

    IX

    Two months have passed. Nothing is changed at Lagny, in that house to which I introduced you one winter evening, except that all about its red brick walls with their frame of gray stone and its slated roofs yellowed by venerable moss, the springtime is in its bloom. The family is scattered here and there, enjoying the mild and fragrant evening air; the setting sun gilds the windowpanes and the roar of the factory mingles with the various noises of the farm. Monsieur Delmare is seated on the s...

    XI

    As he alighted from his tilbury in the courtyard at Lagny, Raymon's heart failed him. So he was once more to enter that house which recalled such awful memories! His arguments, being in accord with his passions, might enable him to overcome the impulses of his heart, but not to stifle them, and at that moment the sensation of remorse was as keen as that of desire. The first person who came forward to meet him was Sir Ralph Brown, and when he spied him in his everlasting hunting costume, flank...

    XII

    He had been two hours in the salon when he heard Madame Delmare's sweet and slightly husky voice in the adjoining room. By dint of reflecting on his scheme of seduction he had become as passionately interested as an author in his subject or a lawyer in his cause, and the emotion that he felt at the sight of Indiana may be compared to that of an actor thoroughly imbued with the spirit of his role who finds himself in the presence of the principal character of the drama and can no longer distin...

    XVII

    On leaving Sir Ralph, Madame Delmare had locked herself into her room, and a thousand tempestuous thoughts had invaded her mind. It was not the first time that a vague suspicion had cast its ominous light upon the fragile edifice of her happiness. Monsieur Delmare had previously let slip in conversation some of those indelicate jests which pass for compliments. He had complimented Raymon on his knightly triumphs in a way to give the cue to ears that knew naught of the incident. Every time tha...

    XVIII

    "This is a wretchedly devised falsehood," said Raymon, as soon as the sound of Ralph's footsteps had died away. "Sir Ralph needs a lesson, and I will administer it in such shape–" "I forbid it," said Indiana, in a cold, determined tone: "my husband is here: Ralph never lied. You and I are lost. There was a time when the thought would have frozen me with horror; to-day it matters little to me!" "Very well!" said Raymon, seizing her in his arms excitedly, "since death encompasses us, be mine! F...

  5. 14 ott 2008 · Indiana : George Sand : Free Download, Borrow, and Streaming : Internet Archive. by. George Sand. Publication date. 1869. Publisher. Lévy. Collection. europeanlibraries. Book from the collections of. Oxford University. Language. English. Book digitized by Google from the library of Oxford University and uploaded to the Internet Archive by user tpb.

  6. Inizia a leggere Indiana 📖 online e accedi a una libreria illimitata di titoli accademici e di saggistica su Perlego.