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Examples
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People of fashion go to the Eaux Bonnes and to Luchon, and people who are really ill to Bareges and Cauterets.
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Nothing done for him succeeded; the resolution was then taken to send him to various practicians in Flanders, and elsewhere in the realm, then to the waters, among others to Bareges.
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We left next day without visiting Bareges and Bagneres, where the most brilliant preparations had been made to receive their Majesties.
Complete Project Gutenberg Collection of Memoirs of Napoleon Various
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An affection of the knee-joint sent him to Bareges: he was speedily cured; but was so attracted by the pleasures of French society, that he remained in France till the Revolution; from which he had a narrow escape.
International Weekly Miscellany of Literature, Art, and Science — Volume 1, No. 4, July 22, 1850 Various
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Lemoine endured a bath of Bareges water of 37° for half an hour; but at 45° he could not remain in it more than seven minutes, and the perspiration began to flow at the end of six minutes.
Scientific American Supplement, No. 360, November 25, 1882 Various
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He remained there only two or three days, and held each day an interview with his Majesty, who seemed little better satisfied with the grand duke than the grand duke was with him, and left afterwards for the springs of Bareges.
Complete Project Gutenberg Collection of Memoirs of Napoleon Various
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Seven and a half miles from Vico up the wooded vale of the Liamone and by the Bridges of Silvani and Belfiori, the village of Murzo and the Col de Sorro, are the Baths of Guagno, with hot, sulphurous springs, resembling in their properties those of Bareges in the
Itinerary through Corsica by its Rail, Carriage & Forest Roads C. B. Black
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He remained there only two or three days, and held each day an interview with his Majesty, who seemed little better satisfied with the grand duke than the grand duke was with him, and left afterwards for the springs of Bareges.
Recollections of the private life of Napoleon Wairy, Louis Constant, 1778-1845 1895
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We left next day without visiting Bareges and Bagneres, where the most brilliant preparations had been made to receive their Majesties.
Recollections of the private life of Napoleon Wairy, Louis Constant, 1778-1845 1895
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He went to Bareges again, where Monseigneur the Bishop of Tarbes had appealed to him for help in the erection of an hospital.
Jasmin: Barber, Poet, Philanthropist Smiles, Samuel, 1812-1904 1891
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