WINTER in Classic Quotes

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Quotes from Les Misérables 4 by Victor Hugo
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 Current Search - winter in Les Misérables 4
1  I shall be hungry this summer, and I shall be cold this winter.
Les Misérables 4 By Victor Hugo
ContextHighlight   In BOOK 8: CHAPTER IV—A CAB RUNS IN ENGLISH AND BARKS IN SLANG
2  It was a door even more glacial than that of winter which was ajar.
Les Misérables 4 By Victor Hugo
ContextHighlight   In BOOK 6: CHAPTER II—IN WHICH LITTLE GAVROCHE EXTRACTS PROFIT FROM ...
3  All winter long, Cosette's little house was heated from top to bottom.
Les Misérables 4 By Victor Hugo
ContextHighlight   In BOOK 3: CHAPTER II—JEAN VALJEAN AS A NATIONAL GUARD
4  In winter the thicket was black, dripping, bristling, shivering, and allowed some glimpse of the house.
Les Misérables 4 By Victor Hugo
ContextHighlight   In BOOK 3: CHAPTER III—FOLIIS AC FRONDIBUS
5  It seems as though the gloomy door of winter had remained ajar, and as though the wind were pouring through it.
Les Misérables 4 By Victor Hugo
ContextHighlight   In BOOK 6: CHAPTER II—IN WHICH LITTLE GAVROCHE EXTRACTS PROFIT FROM ...
6  The passions and loves which succeed each other had not produced in him those successive green growths, tender green or dark green, which can be seen in foliage which passes through the winter and in men who pass fifty.
Les Misérables 4 By Victor Hugo
ContextHighlight   In BOOK 15: CHAPTER I—A DRINKER IS A BABBLER
7  Terrible, toad-like tongue which goes and comes, leaps, crawls, slobbers, and stirs about in monstrous wise in that immense gray fog composed of rain and night, of hunger, of vice, of falsehood, of injustice, of nudity, of suffocation, and of winter, the high noonday of the miserable.
Les Misérables 4 By Victor Hugo
ContextHighlight   In BOOK 7: CHAPTER I—ORIGIN
8  Then, it was in the month of March, the days were growing longer, the winter was departing, the winter always bears away with it a portion of our sadness; then came April, that daybreak of summer, fresh as dawn always is, gay like every childhood; a little inclined to weep at times like the new-born being that it is.
Les Misérables 4 By Victor Hugo
ContextHighlight   In BOOK 4: CHAPTER I—A WOUND WITHOUT, HEALING WITHIN