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Alphabetical    [«  »]
offered 3
offering 1
offers 1
office 122
office- 1
office-gossip 1
office-holder 1
Frequency    [«  »]
128 such
125 know
124 more
122 office
121 two
120 up
119 can
Honoré de Balzac
Bureaucracy

IntraText - Concordances

office

    Chapter
1 1| supernumerary a~government office, where an unknown protector 2 1| to~retain the workers in office, proceeded to diminish salaries 3 1| name of an underling in~office rated for a larger sum than 4 1| porter~into a government office to decide the fate of some 5 1| another, in a government office, may~communicate with all 6 1| thoroughly appreciated that the~office of Master of petitions, 7 2| July has suppressed his office, eminently useful as it 8 2| announced at the Foreign Office parties?"~ ~"Ah, but she 9 2| a man who came to his office with measured steps, like 10 3| of~toil in a government office, the property of "the Saillards"-- 11 3| Saillard obtained a government~office for the sale of stamped 12 3| cashier~got back from the office, he laid aside his coat, 13 3| five years in a government office behind an iron railing had~ 14 3| with a supernumerary of his office who was destined,~later, 15 3| supernumerary in a government office in Paris~means.~ ~The supernumerary 16 3| appointed to some important~office. The rich supernumerary 17 3| is known in a government~office. The incapable man has a 18 3| not talent~enough for an office, he cabals in the Chamber. 19 3| supernumerary in a government office is precisely what the novitiate~ 20 3| carrying into the general office, for the purpose of~copying, 21 3| industry to the salary of their office, in order to~eke out a living. 22 3| carefully in a box in~the office where no one would ever 23 3| never mind now. Go to the office very early tomorrow morning; 24 4| enter you will find the office~servant; in the second, 25 4| under-clerks; the private office of the~second head-clerk 26 4| public feet. The clerk's office beyond is a large~room, 27 4| administrative luxury. The clerk's office contents itself~with a stove, 28 4| of the under-head-clerk's office always~stands open so that 29 4| customs of a government office; the chief~features of which 30 4| were the living~rooms and office of Monsieur Ernest de la 31 4| secret~door with the private office of his Excellency. A private 32 4| when his protector leaves office,~returning sometimes when 33 4| breakfasts to the clerks at the office.~ ~The elder of these men, 34 4| outstayed the last man in the office; such a thing hasn't happened~ 35 4| aware~that in a government office incapacity was no hindrance 36 4| Sebastien did his work at the office for the small compensation~ 37 4| rehearsals, come to the~office at his own hours, and work 38 4| Bruel was a plodder; at the~office he read the newest books, 39 4| rendered.~The clerks in the office liked their companion well 40 4| frequent little visits at the office. Young La Billardiere,~the 41 4| let us have them at the office."~ ~"They did to-day, by 42 4| Monsieur Dutocq close the office door, "I'd give them up 43 4| who sits in~a government office and writes. But there, there, 44 4| the stove in the large office~draws like the devil; you 45 4| of deeds in~Rabourdin's office named Phellion, a respectable 46 4| eldest son into a~government office and his second into the 47 4| the Opera. Silent in~the office, with his feet in the air 48 4| wealthy~young man. After the office closed he appeared in the 49 4| outside of~a government office. Short in stature but well-formed, 50 4| as well as Vimeux. At the~office he kept in the background, 51 4| and ate nothing at the office. Once a month he took Zelie 52 4| their dirty linen at the office, had obtained the~disrepute 53 4| passed it on his way to~the office. From six to eight o'clock 54 4| apprenticeship in a government office. Their mother~made herself 55 4| understand a~word. At the office he was often seen in a melancholy 56 4| Poiret junior left the~office regularly at four o'clock. 57 4| day Poiret appeared at the office with another hat, lent~by 58 4| the~unhappy slaves of that office. His name was Fleury. He 59 4| and on the wall of his office hung, in a~frame, his coat 60 4| fact, the sphere of the office; his horizon is bounded 61 4| the day, looked upon their office as a sort~of class-room 62 4| affection. A government office is, in short, a microcosm 63 5| and there is no insurance office where the chances of life 64 5| prevent the work in the latter~office from being more rapidly 65 5| had gone very early to the office and replaced both the memorandum 66 5| his desire to get to the office early, preceded by the~spirit 67 5| Did any one get to the office before you?" he asked.~ ~" 68 5| clerk had remained at the office after four~o'clock the previous 69 5| called from his private office, and Dutocq, who had rushed 70 5| nobody. Every one in~this office knew his intellect was herculean. 71 5| as such in a~government office."~ ~Bixiou [laughing]. " 72 5| little louder; you bring this office into such~high repute with 73 5| leave his~desk, nor I my office. Put yourself at my wife' 74 5| am obliged to leave the office for the~rest of the day. 75 5| profit!" [Returns to the office.] "Gentlemen, I~announce 76 5| gets that in Rabourdin's office; why~shouldn't I get it 77 5| breakfast, and come~into my office for your orders for the 78 5| retire into the private office.]~ ~Chazelle. "Damned unlucky!"~ ~ 79 5| galley-slave outside of this office, and who could~earn, if 80 5| get through within~this office in three days; well, he 81 5| so elsewhere than in this office."~[To Fleury.] "What are 82 5| sir; go back to your own~office, and do not disturb mine."~ ~ 83 5| Lupeaulx was closeted in~his office with du Bruel, where, a 84 5| old before they entered office~have proved second or third 85 6| the clerks~in a government office is so regulated that, when 86 6| taken the~emoluments of an office of which Rabourdin did all 87 6| Bixiou [shouting across the office]. "Du Bruel! Will you bet?"~ ~ 88 6| you reached the newspaper office in time?" remarked Elisabeth~ 89 6| further wires. "Go to the office and ask who has dared to 90 6| article to the newspaper office I met a young abbe who~brought 91 6| returning to the clerks' office and~addressing his colleagues. " 92 6| fag at your work in the office."~ ~Du Bruel [smiling]. " 93 6| out through the~clerks' office.] "Adieu, gentlemen; didn' 94 6| over~his paper, Vimeux the office sheet, and Phellion departs 95 7| capacities of the men in office, will lead to," she replied,~ 96 7| might~now have been high in office and rich. I could have saved 97 7| francs a year outside of my office, and I might then have~become, 98 8| direction of the secretary's office.~ ~The bureaus Rabourdin 99 8| niente habits of a government~office. Nevertheless, the approaching 100 8| returning to the clerks' office and asking himself~how he 101 8| rushed to the Rabourdin office for a word~of greeting. 102 8| noble viscount) to fill the office for~which Monsieur Baudoyer 103 8| you" [he dives into his office~desk]. "But" [to himself] " 104 8| thus get back an important office to~give to friends; it may 105 8| understand that I am not seeking office or anything else that would~ 106 8| rushed up to Baudoyer's~office, where he found Dutocq, 107 8| reads]:--~ ~"Saillard.--The office of cashier to be suppressed 108 8| days more~to remain in the office, and cared nothing either 109 8| not show it, to find the office~deserted.~ ~Phellion. "My 110 8| into Monsieur Baudoyer's office to see a~paper which it 111 8| days more to stay in the~office]. "But, gentlemen, what 112 8| and a half to stay in this office, and I do wish that once, 113 8| to ask him to come to the office of the head of the~division 114 8| he took Baudoyer into the office of the late La Billardiere. 115 8| himself up in the late chief's office with~Monsieur Baudoyer, 116 8| then he returned to the office,~and took up his work, satisfied 117 8| Rabourdin." [Dutocq leaves the office.] "Oh, yes, go and complain 118 8| to go to the~secretary's office."~ ~All the clerks. "Done 119 8| amusing work in a newspaper office."~ ~Bixiou. "Dutocq has 120 8| to leave~this government office without ever understanding 121 8| Before you leave this office forever perhaps you~would 122 8| humiliating. He carries the~office letter-paper home, and asked


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