Chapter
1 1| HOUSEHOLD~In Paris, where men of thought and study bear
2 1| prudent, because he knew men; exquisitely courteous with
3 1| to attract distinguished men. Tall, handsome, and~finely-formed,
4 1| mathematicians, poets,~merchants, men who understand money, or
5 1| the~hindrances imposed by men and things; then, like all
6 1| and was~silent. Like other men in whom sentiments and ideas
7 1| subordinating all things and all men~to his will, retarded for
8 1| bind~INTERESTS to it, not MEN. The government-clerks being
9 1| ruined sons.~ ~Superior men could scarcely bring themselves
10 1| leading strings; it stifles men of talent who~are bold enough
11 1| this were the really useful men, the~workers, victims of
12 1| victims of such parasites; men sincerely devoted to their~
13 1| welfare of nations individual men never seem essential to
14 1| and customs which drive~men of intellect into disgust,
15 1| could be managed by ten men; a prefecture by a dozen
16 1| France to five~thousand men, exclusive of the departments
17 2| des Lupeaulx,~one of those men whom the tide of political
18 2| continual~compromises between men, between things, between
19 2| in the so-called superior men of the Restoration~their
20 2| word of command for which~men of real talent were listening.
21 2| the more ambitious public men felt it was necessary to~
22 2| Nevertheless, feeling that such men were dependent on him, this~
23 2| same indolence as himself. Men who could all say~such witty
24 2| character, as well as to upright men who are at ease only with~
25 2| Rabourdin, one of our most able men, and to whom~our predecessors
26 3| and judged so soberly of~men and events that at the time
27 3| be given only to~faithful men, whose religious principles
28 3| Dear me!" said Falleix, "do men of merit need protectors
29 3| and several elegant young men,~such as Paul de Manerville
30 3| had reached an age when~men assert pretensions in regard
31 3| but, as with most busy men, his feelings and sentiments
32 3| foolish as to put its able men into the administration.
33 3| down to either those young men who are foolish or~obstinate
34 3| indispensable qualities in men who are to bear the burden
35 3| a long acquaintance with men and things obtained by intercourse~
36 3| for even the cleverest of men. Yes, I welcomed you to
37 3| object to draw together two men who can never injure,~but,
38 4| served, and adulated~by free men. In France ministers are
39 4| office.~ ~The elder of these men, who was also the richest,
40 4| knowing none but those of the men in power.~Monsieur Rabourdin
41 4| to be; and he made such men sit to him for hours.~ ~
42 4| use the same power to make men further his fortunes and~
43 4| the horoscopes of famous men in~the anagram of their
44 4| Rabourdin, speaking~of the two men, "whether our friendships
45 4| salary and far heavier work. Men are neither wearied nor
46 4| of~seminaries. Wherever men live collectively this likeness
47 5| you know all celebrated~men make a dying speech; he
48 5| Do evil feelings bring men to the same result as~talents?" [
49 5| civil-service career. So many men were in the army that there~
50 5| employments and become the great men you really are."~ ~Chazelle [
51 5| friends~against itself, such men as those of the 'Debats,'
52 5| owes what she is to the men about her, whereas Madame
53 5| after page, in which the men of his~acquaintance were
54 5| of privacy which public men can snatch from the~current
55 5| control of the middle-~aged men of the Chamber and the septuagenarians
56 5| was able to~employ young men as he chose, without being
57 5| between Pitt and Napoleon, two men who conducted the politics
58 5| best known of our great men, coming~from the ranks or
59 5| decision which distinguishes men who are~early accustomed
60 5| in political life~these men, less old than aged, have
61 5| the habit of listening to men of~undoubted superiority
62 5| affairs of France. Such~men, by whom the difficulties
63 5| supported by so many clever men. In fact, his misfortune
64 5| greatest weakness of the public men of the Restoration~was their
65 5| was all incomprehensible. Men of upright~minds are often
66 6| the confidence of honest men."~ ~"If you would kindly
67 6| secure the future of two men who are ready to do~anything
68 6| uttered among those old men, would have made an artist~
69 6| Lupeaulx was one of those men who to satisfy a passion
70 6| of familiarity assumed by men~who know they are indispensable.~ ~"
71 6| of a certain~Samanon."~ ~"Men whom I helped to make their
72 6| managing a ministry with such men as~Baudoyer under me!"~ ~"
73 7| women are just what we men are. Twenty-eight years
74 7| offended des Lupeaulx;~such men never forgive, and yet he
75 7| service of six thousand men instead of~twenty thousand?
76 7| but do not meddle with men, with little~men; they cry
77 7| meddle with men, with little~men; they cry out too much,
78 7| analyzed~the capacities of the men in office, will lead to,"
79 7| never told me! That's what~men are! capable of sleeping
80 7| lips~together. Very busy men are apt to have very ignorant
81 7| loose a few dogs upon the men we were~talking of. You
82 7| paper and such and such men will attack your~measures
83 7| properly allow themselves with men,~even when they are grand
84 7| as a laugh to the two old men,~who took their way back (
85 7| are so~misleading about men in politics that we are
86 7| days when a king~could make men great at will,--such men
87 7| men great at will,--such men as Louvois, Colbert,~Richelieu,
88 8| government to be recruited from men of talent whom you~ignore.
89 8| Rabourdin, a king among men! If such men are spies,
90 8| king among men! If such men are spies, it is enough
91 8| Such a man, the king of men,~that he--"~ ~Poiret [to
92 8| coats,~gold lace, cheese, men, women, and children; they
93 8| in her arms with a force men do not~possess, even in
94 8| stronger~through emotion than men through power. She wept
95 8| Rabourdin has the respect~of men of honor."~ ~Dutocq [annoyed]. "
96 8| ministerial deputies, a few men of influence, and Monsieur~
97 8| and verified by an army of men in spectacles. If~there
98 8| Moreover, we~employ a body of men who could do no other work.
99 8| Monsieur le directeur, that few men see from the~standpoint
100 8| Briere. "It is not ideas, but men capable of executing them
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