Each search starts from the first page. Its result is limited to the first 17 sentences. If you upgrade to a VIP account, you will see up to 500 sentences for one search.
1 The neighbors devastated the garden and pillaged the rare flowers.
Les Misérables 3By Victor Hugo ContextHighlight In BOOK 3: CHAPTER IV—END OF THE BRIGAND
2 Leblanc nor the young girl had again set foot in the Luxembourg garden.
Les Misérables 3By Victor Hugo ContextHighlight In BOOK 8: CHAPTER I—MARIUS, WHILE SEEKING A GIRL IN A BONNET, ...
3 Then he started up and walked about the Luxembourg garden like a madman.
Les Misérables 3By Victor Hugo ContextHighlight In BOOK 6: CHAPTER VI—TAKEN PRISONER
4 He concluded that they had quitted the garden by the gate on the Rue de l'Ouest.
Les Misérables 3By Victor Hugo ContextHighlight In BOOK 6: CHAPTER V—DIVRS CLAPS OF THUNDER FALL ON MA'AM BOUGON
5 The plot of earth which he called his garden was celebrated in the town for the beauty of the flowers which he cultivated there.
Les Misérables 3By Victor Hugo ContextHighlight In BOOK 3: CHAPTER II—ONE OF THE RED SPECTRES OF THAT EPOCH
6 He took good care not to become useless; having books did not prevent his reading, being a botanist did not prevent his being a gardener.
Les Misérables 3By Victor Hugo ContextHighlight In BOOK 5: CHAPTER IV—M. MABEUF
7 He often spent half a day in gazing at a market garden, the beds of lettuce, the chickens on the dung-heap, the horse turning the water-wheel.
Les Misérables 3By Victor Hugo ContextHighlight In BOOK 5: CHAPTER V—POVERTY A GOOD NEIGHBOR FOR MISERY
8 The garden situated immediately under his windows was attached to that one of them which formed the angle, by means of a staircase twelve or fifteen steps long, which the old gentleman ascended and descended with great agility.
Les Misérables 3By Victor Hugo ContextHighlight In BOOK 2: CHAPTER II—LIKE MASTER, LIKE HOUSE
9 He occupied an ancient and vast apartment on the first floor, between street and gardens, furnished to the very ceilings with great Gobelins and Beauvais tapestries representing pastoral scenes; the subjects of the ceilings and the panels were repeated in miniature on the arm-chairs.
Les Misérables 3By Victor Hugo ContextHighlight In BOOK 2: CHAPTER II—LIKE MASTER, LIKE HOUSE
10 He carried off his Flora, his copper-plates, his herbariums, his portfolios, and his books, and established himself near the Salpetriere, in a sort of thatched cottage of the village of Austerlitz, where, for fifty crowns a year, he got three rooms and a garden enclosed by a hedge, and containing a well.
Les Misérables 3By Victor Hugo ContextHighlight In BOOK 5: CHAPTER IV—M. MABEUF