Chapter
1 1| delay~which kept the great things of life from her grasp,--
2 1| was superior only in those things where it~gave her pleasure
3 1| hindrances imposed by men and things; then, like all women under
4 1| is brought~about in all things by changes in the direction
5 1| Napoleon, by subordinating all things and all men~to his will,
6 1| the judgment. The finest things of~which France can boast
7 1| work for money; a state of things which would have seemed
8 1| these results. This state of things led to servility~on the
9 1| itself. Bureaucracy holds all things and the~administration itself
10 1| Liberals call this state of things Progress; Rabourdin~thought
11 1| tax is a levy of money on things or persons under disguises~
12 1| reduction in the~price of things which the State releases
13 1| jarring the existing state of things or incurring~a Saint-Bartholomew
14 1| fool if need be. She saw things coming~to a crisis. The
15 2| compromises between men, between things, between accomplished facts~
16 2| could all say~such witty things in their cups or in company
17 2| saying for the minister those things that a~minister cannot say
18 2| good taste and of exquisite things, where each detail was a
19 3| solely on the commonest things of life; spent in a few
20 3| ears were receptive of many things; she thought them over,
21 3| the possibility of better things~without expecting or wishing
22 3| acquaintance with men and things obtained by intercourse~
23 3| ambitious man when such things as these are warbled in
24 4| who are made to bear all things. They are~allowed no talents
25 4| life; he always laid his things in~precisely the same place,
26 4| nor bored~when doing great things. Under the present system
27 5| about engravings and such things, my dear fellow,~but you
28 5| Madame Rabourdin is all~things in herself. It is wonderful
29 5| Rabourdin told himself all these things. But he had made up his
30 5| yesterday, for I had other things to attend to; political
31 6| willing; though I can do such things much~better when eating."~ ~
32 6| fail as all good and just~things do fail in this low world.
33 6| broke silence and said: "Things look badly for~you, my poor
34 7| happened?"~ ~"Very serious things," answered des Lupeaulx. "
35 7| colors and put together~things that have no affinity, and
36 7| have taken pains to~get the things you like best--"~ ~"All
37 7| tormenting love; we will take things as they did~under the Regency.
38 8| asserts very flippantly things that he only guesses at."~ ~
39 8| However, I care less for~those things just now than I do for something
40 8| now, let us agree on two~things; first, the postponement
41 8| Ha, gentlemen! strange things are going on in your bureau.
42 8| tempo,' in other words,~'All things are given to him who knows
43 8| like to study the state of things in Rabourdin's salon to-~
44 8| that is in the order of things; a politician~never complains
45 8| the one that does many things with few officials, or the
46 8| interminable~delays between things and their results. You may
47 8| as a row of figures. All~things in the long run, say the
48 8| with the present state of things, and~he demands that there
49 8| and all the~rest of his things are. The other man used
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