1 You will have to come to it, Mademoiselle.
2 I'll have Tonie come over and help me patch and trim my boat.
3 Yes," she went on; "I sometimes thought: 'She will never come.'
4 They had only come to investigate the contents of the bonbon box.
5 "Please come down," he insisted, holding the ladder and looking up at her.
6 Of course, there was Alcee Arobin; and Mademoiselle Reisz had consented to come.
7 They had also come to invite her to play vingt-et-un one evening at Mrs. Merriman's.
8 He had only come up from the island the morning before, and expected to return next day.
9 Old Madame Pontellier had come herself and carried them off to Iberville with their quadroon.
10 Old Celestine, who works occasionally for me, says she will come stay with me and do my work.
11 The mosquito bar was drawn over her; the old woman had come in while she slept and let down the bar.
12 The stillest hour of the night had come, the hour before dawn, when the world seems to hold its breath.
13 It was 'Robert, come; go; stand up; sit down; do this; do that; see if the baby sleeps; my thimble, please, that I left God knows where.'
14 He had come to purchase a wedding gift for his daughter, Janet, and an outfit for himself in which he might make a creditable appearance at her marriage.
15 They seemed never before to have weighed much against the abundance of her husband's kindness and a uniform devotion which had come to be tacit and self-understood.
16 An unusual number of husbands, fathers, and friends had come down to stay over Sunday; and they were being suitably entertained by their families, with the material help of Madame Lebrun.
17 She had come with a gentleman by the name of Gouvernail, connected with one of the daily papers, of whom nothing special could be said, except that he was observant and seemed quiet and inoffensive.
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