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Alphabetical    [«  »]
those 100
thou 2
though 60
thought 72
thoughtful 2
thoughtfully 1
thoughtfulness 1
Frequency    [«  »]
72 bruel
72 colleville
72 may
72 thought
71 get
71 our
71 way
Honoré de Balzac
Bureaucracy

IntraText - Concordances

thought

   Chapter
1 1| HOUSEHOLD~In Paris, where men of thought and study bear a certain 2 1| under penalty of being thought monsters.~ ~Thus it was 3 1| vehement feeling, she became in thought as Machiavellian~as Gondreville, 4 1| Celestine, much grieved, thought her husband narrow-~minded, 5 1| in the circle where his~thought revolved, which, we may 6 1| the government official thought everything permissible~that 7 1| things Progress; Rabourdin~thought it Anarchy at the heart 8 1| reproducing a plan which may be thought the~politics of a chimney-corner, 9 1| ministries, or~departments. He thought that if the France of former 10 1| turn, reduces. Can it be~thought a proper method of governing 11 2| listening. It must not be thought that this~word was the outcome 12 2| noble.~ ~The persons present thought important matters were being 13 3| Chinese Laborer." Elisabeth thought "the comedy" as wearisome 14 3| told her. She would have thought it a mortal sin~to make 15 3| receptive of many things; she thought them over, weighed and~compared 16 3| his merchandise. Falleix thought his old countryman~extortionate, 17 3| contracted with unaccustomed thought.~ ~"He is always so when 18 3| gossip, their places, as he~thought, depended on their discretion,-- 19 3| Gobseck helped in him 1814," thought~she. "Is he in debt?" she 20 3| caught sight of him and~thought, "What has happened to him? 21 3| some good news,~but the thought has overtaken me that it 22 3| feel for you is marred by a~thought of self-interest? Why should 23 3| the house.~ ~"At last!" thought Madame Rabourdin, as she 24 4| singer, and an actress, had thought of doing as so many of the~ 25 4| in the bureaus that she thought of securing some more~powerful 26 4| X., he had bestowed much thought~on the king's anagram. Thuillier, 27 4| attitude, as~though absorbed in thought, when in fact he was thinking 28 4| some of his colleagues thought him a "carbonaro," others 29 4| Benjamin de la Billardiere thought himself a charming fellow~ 30 4| with des Lupeaulx, whom he thought his~friend, and they often 31 5| do the same thing and be thought a great man, able to choose 32 5| Charles X. The Comte d'Artois thought very highly~of La Billardiere, 33 5| put his finger in this!"~thought Dutocq, alarmed on finding 34 5| the~cold. I shouldn't have thought it!"~ ~To all his other 35 5| their~scanty comfort.~ ~"I thought Rabourdin was a man above 36 5| which at this~period it was thought advisable to repress in 37 5| would be received; he little~thought that the great work that 38 5| The minister smiled as he thought of des Lupeaulx's enthusiasm 39 6| Bixiou [entering]. "I thought I should find you at a white 40 6| Environs of Paris? I thought they were talking of~Monsieur 41 6| place. I should never have thought of that; but this young~ 42 6| little speech. This is what I thought of: 'Madame, if~you would 43 6| good place in~your galley," thought he as he seated himself 44 6| smiling]. "Dear me, I never thought of that. Poor Rabourdin!~ 45 6| explain it to a woman," thought he. "Is Celestine worth~ 46 7| Lupeaulx, harshly,~for he still thought it best to make a show of 47 7| pulls the wires."~ ~The thought of her debts crossed Madame 48 7| she said, laughing; "I~thought you more magnanimous than 49 7| than you are. And you, you thought me~less a person than I 50 7| hand.~ ~Celestine no longer thought him ugly, nor old, nor white 51 7| grace of her words. "The thought used to terrify me," she 52 7| hair-dresser."~ ~"At last!" thought Celestine. "I don't see 53 7| and worth~cultivating," thought the elderly butterfly as 54 7| enough~in a dressing-gown!" thought Celestine, "but the harpoon 55 7| heavens! the poor soul!" she thought, as she left the room, " 56 7| thousand francs a year!" he thought, looking at the flower-~ 57 7| She performs miracles," thought des Lupeaulx. "What a wonderfully~ 58 7| sentence.~ ~"Dear creature!" thought des Lupeaulx, as he saw 59 7| on Madame Rabourdin: one thought her too studied in manner,~ 60 7| ornaments of her apparel, she thought over the events of~this 61 8| bet the incorrigible joker~thought it amusing to pretend that 62 8| He means a quarrel," thought the minister; "and all because 63 8| behaved like a low woman," she thought, "we should have had~the 64 8| between two powers the one he~thought strongest. He has served 65 8| their~misfortune. The wife thought of the dreadful situation 66 8| Your Excellency may have thought, on the morning when I first~ 67 8| Fatigued by the pressure of thought, overcome by mental suffering, 68 8| uselessly for my country when I thought I was being useful to her. 69 8| and ordinances will be thought laws. God made this epoch~ 70 8| laughing]. "I shouldn't have thought you capable of that~distinction, 71 8| scribes of governmental thought; the Opposition even now 72 8| Rabourdin ever had the absurd thought (as des~Lupeaulx tries to


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