Fifty-first element of the sexagenary cycle.
1Signee Cheryl Gabin wrote: I did not sign up for an online event.
2Sure enough, when I lost Gabin I was just like you.
3From the bedside Mme Gabin was prompting the young man.
4Mme Gabin had brought in some breakfast, but Marguerite refused to taste any food.
5Mme Gabin's slipshod tread was still audible over the floor.
6And the doctor coming-thedoctor of the dead, as Mme Gabin had called him.
7Is it all over? cried Mme Gabin, looking at me.
8Nevertheless, Mme Gabin remarked: "The doctor of the dead hasn't come yet."
9Dietrich joined Gabin in the hotel, where he stayed after being demobbed in July 1945.
10Raymond Chandler said that Bogart could be tough without a gun, and Gabin was France's Bogart.
11The last sound I heard was the clicking of the scissors handled by Mme Gabin and Dede.
12Mme Gabin had just closed my eyelids, but I had not felt her finger on my face.
13Mme Gabin lifted her, placed her in a dilapidated armchair near the fireplace and proceeded to comfort her.
14Jean-Claude Gabin, a French philosophy student.
15What a to-do! muttered Mme Gabin.
16As they were seizing me by the shoulders and feet I heard Mme Gabin fly into a violent passion.