Paragraph
1 Note| nature.~ ~In "The Great Man of the Provinces in Paris"
2 1 | great barons of France, a man above whom there~is but
3 1 | above whom there~is but one man,the King of France, once
4 1 | and wide enough to admit a man on~horseback,a circumstance
5 2 | which explains the young man's final name of Louis.~ ~
6 2 | and loyal Breton was now a man of seventy-three; but his
7 2 | straight, wiry, lean old man. His oval~face was lined
8 2 | Breton granite was made man.~ ~The baron had no longer
9 2 | shaving had obliged the old man to~let his beard grow, and
10 2 | examining~that grand old man with sustained observation,
11 2 | interest," said the old man.~"Besides, it is for him
12 2 | and somnolence of the old man. The fresh defeat and~exile
13 2 | forty-two years of age, many a man would~have thought it happiness
14 2 | the~sacred life of the old man's wife by surrounding her
15 2 | chivalry. An~imaginative man seated on the steps of the
16 2 | woman what Gasselin was as~a man. No team could be better
17 3 | replied.~ ~Monsieur Grimont, a man of fifty, of middle height,
18 3 | decorum. His gaiety, that of a man whose~conscience was calm
19 3 | teeth, and the hands of a man.~She was rather short, a
20 3 | eagerness, and the manner of a man accustomed~to perform this
21 3 | abbe.~ ~The chevalier was a man in poor health, who wore
22 3 | usually accompanied him. This man, fussy as~a fine lady, worried
23 4 | creature, who is neither man nor~woman, who smokes like
24 4 | and he's a /juste-milieu/ man who reads the~ ~papers.
25 4 | to marry Charlotte to a man with sixty~thousand francs
26 4 | trembled. When~the worthy man saw the tears in the beautiful
27 4 | deceived. This crisis in a man's life is one of the trials~
28 4 | he~added, "that a young man brought up by you, trained
29 4 | dangerous~mistress a young man can have."~ ~"As to that,
30 5 | resembling a girl disguised as a man, his physical~strength was
31 5 | reprehensible, and she has taken a man's name,"~added Madame du
32 5 | I suppose," said the old man. "I was called 'l'Intime,'~
33 5 | A woman who takes a man's name,Camille Maupin!"
34 5 | an actress," said the old man. "Really,~Fanny, if I did
35 5 | Probably," replied the young man.~ ~Mariotte was not inquisitive;
36 5 | Fanny weep?" cried the old man, waking with a start at~
37 5 | my Calyste."~ ~The young man bade adieu to his father
38 6 | was long supposed to be a man, on account of the virility
39 6 | Felicite des Touches became a~man and an author, and why,
40 6 | Monsieur de Faucombe, an old man sixty years of age, had
41 6 | on all topics as a young man entering~a literary career
42 6 | of will is the equal of a man~of thirty. Her mind had
43 6 | exclusively~the province of man. In 1816 she was twenty-five
44 6 | certain~vague similitude to man; they have neither the suppleness
45 6 | nature so~leonine, that a man, however little of a Turk
46 6 | soothes and~interests the man she loves? Will she not
47 6 | eyes have risen? Yes, a man fears to find in such a
48 6 | most women can only see one~man; she despised what other
49 6 | her cost, the folly of a man of gallantry, who~saw nothing
50 6 | perceived by a friend, a man, who consoled her without
51 6 | which Felicite lacked. A man of genius, a poet~and a
52 6 | all Art. This celebrated man, who is nameless, may be~
53 6 | obscure, while offering a man's name and work to criticism.~ ~
54 6 | uninhabitable, and she sent her man of business to Guerande
55 6 | displayed at Les Touches. Her man of~business gave orders
56 6 | did not precede her; her man of business alone knew the~
57 6 | her future to a superior man, to whom her fortune~would
58 7 | riding-whip, a hammock, a rifle, a man's blouse, tobacco, pipes,
59 7 | is always adorable to a man in whom she inspires~love,
60 7 | do not assail a~mature man, trained to the ups and
61 7 | entering the room, the young man sat down upon a Gothic~seat
62 7 | a faculty that is~not in man,that of abandoning ourselves
63 7 | die without finding in~any man the love which fills my
64 8 | pleased to see her marry a man to whom she was~superior
65 8 | conceit and vanity as a clever man,~which gives him a mean
66 8 | admiration depicted on the young~man's face was more for the
67 8 | Beatrix met at my house a man with whom I had expected
68 8 | Conti, the great composer, a man of Neapolitan origin,~though
69 8 | perhaps have been taken for a man~of genius. He has one advantage
70 8 | though he would rather be~a man of genius like Rossini than
71 8 | them; you shall see the man here in a day or two. He
72 8 | with me; he is posing~as a man who is wretched at having
73 8 | the fatigues of this young man are not apparent;~perhaps
74 8 | childlike and~splendid both. The man is tall, slightly bent already,
75 8 | and abandons his outer man with Diogenic~indifference.
76 8 | aware that you are not~a man to climb in by a window."~ ~"
77 8 | Calm yourself, young man; I have the utmost indulgence
78 8 | to be that little young man," said the critic, sitting~
79 8 | cold, pale spectre of a man.~Ignorant he might be, as
80 8 | blending. The handsome young man~in his black velvet coat,
81 8 | of the heart that~makes a man and his power? Would you
82 8 | at Calyste.~ ~The young man was deeply wounded by the
83 8 | attracting~youth. A young man feels that he is sure to
84 8 | they cling to~love as a man condemned to death clings
85 8 | never be forgotten by a man, any more than he~can forget
86 9 | FIRST MEETING~What young man full of abounding but restrained
87 9 | green~veil, accompanied by a man. This boat was the first
88 9 | father's house. A~young man brought up as he had been,
89 9 | This is the celebrated man of whom we have talked so
90 9 | She presented to Calyste a man of medium height, thin and
91 10 | have chosen either a common man or one so~preoccupied by
92 10 | and easy to mislead as a man of genius. I am not a~man
93 10 | man of genius. I am not a~man of genius, I am a man of
94 10 | a~man of genius, I am a man of talent, and as such I
95 10 | magnificent passions reserved for~man. But she is in some sense
96 10 | But she is in some sense a man," he added, sardonically. "
97 10 | supposed to impossible for a~man, however keen his perception,
98 10 | thought," said the young man, "that you would probably
99 10 | with her?"~ ~"My dear, one man to two widows is none too
100 10 | Nothing," replied the young man, releasing himself with
101 10 | avoided meeting the~young man's eyes, and practised a
102 10 | little Charlotte. The young man alone kept silence. For~
103 11 | a woman inspires in any man's~heart is flattery without
104 11 | forego it; but when that man belongs to a friend, his
105 11 | those of the woman, hey? The man did not observe them enough
106 11 | lowered her eyes.~ ~"After man, there is nought but God,"
107 11 | was~stupefied by the young man's assertion, and could not
108 12 | accepting homage. That a man should~love me, or say he
109 12 | but if I permitted another man to love me, I should fall~
110 12 | should find courage to kill a man who,~seeing me in that situation,
111 12 | and destroy my life. If a man, after ten years'~happiness,
112 12 | to me that~Camille is a man; she swims, hunts, smokes,
113 12 | madness!" said the young man, kissing her.~ ~"I wish
114 13 | love of so charming a young man. She did not go so far as
115 13 | significance of things which, to a man, seem~insignificant. Two
116 13 | you will see~Cambremer, a man who does penance on a rock
117 13 | room which contains the man they~admire, unless they
118 13 | When, in order to make a man happy, amuse him, please
119 13 | devil to help us"~ ~"That man would reproach us later
120 13 | you have something of the man about~you; you behave like
121 13 | about~you; you behave like a man; nothing restrains you;
122 13 | you; if you haven't all~a man's advantages, you have a
123 13 | s advantages, you have a man's spirit in all your ways;
124 14 | mother," said the young man to Camille.~ ~The marquise
125 14 | cleft, chance, possibly man, has conveyed enough vegetable
126 14 | should beg my pardon of the man I have offended. I will
127 14 | opposition roused in the young man one of those mute inward~
128 14 | shall never belong to any man!" cried Calyste, pushing
129 14 | you?" said Camille.~ ~The man seemed surprised that he
130 14 | symptoms of a passion such as man can feel but once,a~passion
131 14 | captivating~image of a young man loving with idolatry and
132 14 | her whole person to~the man who ought to have been faithful
133 14 | bound to an evil genius, a man as false as~Conti. More
134 15 | extinguished love still gives to a man over a woman. Beatrix could
135 15 | such depravity as loving a man for the sake of his beauty.~
136 15 | tricked by the most wily man I~have ever known, and I
137 15 | been willing to abandon a man in prosperity, would~sacrifice
138 15 | to discover. There~is no man in the world, however /blase/
139 15 | this extremity, both the~man and the woman strive for
140 15 | angel for belonging to a~man without delicacy; show her
141 15 | its primitive purity. A man resists the violent grief~
142 16 | each other as the young man closed the door of his chamber.
143 16 | Charlotte," said the young man, taking~her hands and kissing
144 16 | wait," replied the young man.~ ~"And I, too," said Charlotte,
145 16 | you can choose some better man than I. You could marry
146 16 | You could marry a titled man. I~have brought you here,
147 16 | you~do not wish to marry a man whose heart is not free;
148 16 | struggle; I am weakened like a man whose vital~spark is gone,
149 16 | a bench, where the young man's eyes could~wander from
150 16 | had divined in that old man an apostle of his~own religion;
151 16 | life itself," said the old~man, pointing to Thisbe. "The
152 16 | Calyste thanked the old man, whose existence he envied.
153 16 | coaxing wisdom of an old man.~ ~"We can talk of Madame
154 16 | replied Calyste.~ ~The old man dropped into a chair.~ ~"
155 16 | father's face, for the old man was exhausted by the~cruel
156 16 | proportion as the worthy man had formerly detested her,
157 16 | coming on of death. The old man died in his chair in~presence
158 16 | obey you," said the young man.~ ~"If you wish to make
159 17 | hundred thousand~francs. Her man of business had since purchased
160 17 | unmarried,~in memory of a man she had deeply loved, Lucien
161 17 | did. Woman is the equal of man only in making her life~
162 17 | continual offering, as that of man is a perpetual action; my~
163 17 | Sabine! at the mercy of a~man who does not marry entirely
164 17 | husband.~ ~Now think of a man beloved so completely, involuntarily,~
165 17 | was a bagpipe, blown by a man for ten hours;~and after
166 18 | never belong to another man.~ ~"She must be light indeed
167 18 | me, that's true! but what man, unless he~were a monster,
168 18 | Nathan, a statesman and a man of~letters. In the three
169 18 | is why: The desire of the man is a syllogism~which draws
170 18 | not a question of loving a man," she was saying a few moments~
171 18 | acted wisely. To enrich the man we love and then to disappear
172 18 | tore of the soul of the man now wholly thrown back into
173 18 | Sabine. When by chance a man is adored by his wife, she~
174 18 | difficult to find a young man more sacredly brought up~
175 18 | Calyste's brain. The~luckless man was again impelled to that
176 18 | with dignity, when the old man had left the room; "therefore~
177 18 | myself foolishly to any man~I really loved; and secondly,
178 18 | determined to belong to no other~man on earth, for I believed,
179 18 | engagement trammelled, a man absolutely free, and~you
180 18 | write," said the luckless man. "But, in that~case"~ ~"
181 18 | Calyste, rising like a happy man.~ ~"Ah! I have kept, I believe,
182 19 | to the advantage of the man beloved. Calyste was pressed~
183 19 | greater blunder than for a man to talk of~his wife, if
184 19 | truth,two apprenticeships a man in~his position must make
185 19 | might~not see the guilty man, and who put forth reasons
186 19 | the guise of dislike. A man then says to himself, "I
187 21 | dignity. He was a thin little man about fifty~years of age,
188 21 | Madame de Rochefide a little man, very self-willed and full
189 21 | Rochefide, it is~not the hand of man, but that of God, which
190 22 | turns to happiness~for the man. This contrast may inspire
191 22 | presented as a handsome man (to which he owed a few
192 22 | instantly~captivated the man who at that time knew not
193 22 | millionnaire or~moderate-income man, great seigneur or bourgeois,
194 22 | entertained, but applied to a man it signifies the giver of
195 22 | reputation as an amusing man. He~now acquired the certainty
196 22 | month.~ ~"You are a lucky man, my dear marquis," cried
197 22 | satisfactions of a betting man. If you had a stud farm~
198 22 | women of this class say of a~man, "I hold him!" Rochefide,
199 22 | indifference, or philosophy, a man unable to change, who~clings
200 22 | named Gobenheim (the only man of that class admitted to
201 23 | good marriage.~ ~Only one man of equivocal reputation
202 23 | desert his wife. Couture, a man about forty-~three years
203 23 | estate in Alencon. This young man had already, during~previous
204 23 | without being a superior man, had divined, by the~exercise
205 23 | about.~ ~"My dear fellow, a man must make himself talked
206 23 | Madame Schontz, for the man she makes the object of
207 23 | you~that if I could find a man full of ambition, who knew
208 24 | an easy matter to drag a man from the depths of such~
209 24 | admiration is given~to the man who surmounts them. Maxime
210 24 | extremely powerful and capable man, who had known how~to make
211 24 | des Italiens with a young man already well-known, though~
212 25 | discretion of the young man.~ ~"Will you do something
213 25 | Maxime. "Do you think I'm a man to~propose mere twopenny
214 25 | passing him.~ ~Find a great man without some weakness!~ ~
215 25 | Ah, so you are the man who allowed Camille Maupin,
216 25 | replied the marquis; "but a man should be a~gentleman before
217 25 | your whole life, my little man."~ ~"With a woman like you
218 25 | I have a horror of that man," said Fabien; "I wish I
219 25 | that's true; and you are man~who likes figure-heads.
220 25 | complained to him~like a man who feels that his happiness
221 25 | of other things.~ ~"I'm a man of good counsel in such
222 25 | graceful and presuming young~man so highly to Beatrix that
223 26 | cleverness. In Paris, a man~called clever must have
224 26 | Palferine and Calyste, a man of courage without~assertion.
225 26 | thoroughly," said the young man in her ear, "you~ought to
226 26 | wittiest and handsomest young man in Paris to~amuse you?'
227 26 | amuse you?' said the poor man. I was caught. I actually
228 26 | bring me in) 'would kill his~man on the spot' (then weep). '
229 26 | the shell bursts?"~ ~"A man has always mind enough,
230 26 | Maxime left the inconsolable man for the representative of
231 26 | superior force,by a young man on whom her rank and quality
232 26 | Antoine, however, as a prudent man, had told La Palferine that
233 26 | and delivered me from a man I hate,~and whom I trust
234 26 | has~given her hand to the man who furnished the means
235 26 | her duty, the part of a man who adores her as you do,
236 26 | Monsieur le baron, all that man has of the divine~within
237 Add | Betty~The Member for Arcis~A Man of Business~Gaudissart II.~
238 Add | Mademoiselle~A Prince of Bohemia~A Man of Business~Cousin Betty~
239 Add | A Prince of Bohemia~ ~A Man of Business~Cousin Betty~
240 Add | Betty~A Prince of Bohemia~A Man of Business~The Middle Classes~
241 Add | Gobseck~Ursule Mirouet~A Man of Business~The Member for
|