1 Most women are moody and whimsical.
2 Well, well; women are not all alike, my dear Pontellier.
3 She promised as those women in society always do, without meaning it.
4 There were a dozen women she might have had with her, unimpressionable women.
5 She liked money as well as most women, and accepted it with no little satisfaction.
6 The women at once rose and began to shake out their draperies and relax their muscles.
7 She had received instructions from both the men and women; in some instances from the children.
8 The Pontelliers and Ratignolles walked ahead; the women leaning upon the arms of their husbands.
9 The two women went away one morning to the beach together, arm in arm, under the huge white sunshade.
10 The women were both of goodly height, Madame Ratignolle possessing the more feminine and matronly figure.
11 There were silver and gold, as she had said there would be, and crystal which glittered like the gems which the women wore.
12 The two women had no intention of bathing; they had just strolled down to the beach for a walk and to be alone and near the water.
13 Oftener than once her coming had interrupted the droll story with which Robert was entertaining some amused group of married women.
14 Then had followed a rather heated argument; the two women did not appear to understand each other or to be talking the same language.
15 It fluttered the skirts of the two women and kept them for a while engaged in adjusting, readjusting, tucking in, securing hair-pins and hat-pins.
16 The cut glass, the silver, the heavy damask which daily appeared upon the table were the envy of many women whose husbands were less generous than Mr. Pontellier.
17 They were women who idolized their children, worshiped their husbands, and esteemed it a holy privilege to efface themselves as individuals and grow wings as ministering angels.
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