Chapter
1 1| melancholy countenance, blue~eyes full of fire, a skin that
2 1| future; to the maternal eyes a duke or~an ambassador,
3 1| injured her~husband in the eyes of others; for in all countries
4 1| In Monsieur Rabourdin's~eyes the clerk in relation to
5 2| administrations. In their eyes, crime belongs to the assizes
6 2| easily visible. With their eyes fixed on the~carnivora,
7 2| domain to throw dust in the eyes of a constituency?~Though
8 2| of a ministerial officer. Eyes~glazed by the constant use
9 2| the first time, turned her eyes on~him as she spoke. He
10 3| scarcely more than sixteen. Her eyes, of porcelain blue,~overweighted
11 3| by two gleaming vulture eyes, allowed his gray~hair to
12 3| Spanish-tobacco-colored eyes, cold as a~well-rope, always
13 3| Tartar type was in the little eyes and the~flattened nose turned
14 3| lightly at a word, black eyes of oriental shape, able,
15 3| brilliancy of her black hair and eyes. Her slender and well-defined~
16 3| caught the sham statesman's eyes fixed on his wife, and he~
17 3| and dared not~raise his eyes to Madame Rabourdin, whose
18 3| black. His fair face, his eyes, of a fine shade of green
19 3| them. Tears rolled from his~eyes as he realized the greatness
20 4| oval panes of glass like eyes, as at~the theatre. In the
21 4| vulgar pimpled face, gray eyes, and a mouth like a furnace~
22 4| with dark circles round~his eyes, Joseph Godard took little
23 4| the lower one pendent; the eyes light-~blue, and his figure
24 4| with a romantic face, and eyes, hair, beard, and eyebrows
25 4| breakfasts, he lowered his eyes every time he passed~him;
26 4| wiry, with~crisp red hair, eyes of a light yellow, a skin
27 4| number of pages. Poiret's eyes were dim, his glance weak
28 4| watched~them with haggard eyes.~ ~Since the day when he
29 5| Its policy, fatal in~the eyes of those who cling to what
30 5| ministry. Thus it is that their eyes begin to weaken just as~
31 6| at Baudoyer, whose little eyes were expressive of stupid~
32 6| cried Baudoyer, whose eyes were still~riveted on the
33 6| seeing~Mitral, and their eyes gleamed with tigerish curiosity.~ ~"
34 6| La Billardiere, when his eyes were dazzled by the name
35 7| flashes had blinded her eyes at the~same moment; her
36 7| himself a great~man in the eyes of his sole public.~ ~"To
37 7| Carabosse to collect the eyes of ants, or~weave a fabric
38 7| was softly radiant. Her eyes, suffused with the light
39 7| resign."~ ~Des Lupeaulx's eyes dilated, and were as big
40 8| Fleury [rolling his eyes savagely]. "Rabourdin a
41 8| lad~no sooner opened his eyes than he began to weep. He
42 8| minister."~ ~Celestine's eyes were opened to a sudden
43 8| spectacles were sad and his eyes joyous; the~glasses, however,
44 8| flashed from Celestine's eyes; she sprang~up like a startled
45 8| noticed that Phellion's eyes were moist, and he could
46 8| explained, Baudoyer's little~eyes grew big as saucers.~ ~"
47 8| his musket."~ ~Poiret [his eyes wide open]. "Monsieur, a
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