Chapter
1 1| France less prolific of political capacities~than Germany?
2 1| of peace it was a serious political fault to~burden it beyond
3 1| the tranquil~condition of political affairs, which up to this
4 1| mistook the quietude of the political thinker and~the preoccupation
5 2| those men whom the tide of political events sends to the~surface
6 2| who~form the kernel of the political world. Knowing in the science
7 2| honor. Once on the ladder of~political success, his clever mind
8 2| front, he overcame their political mediocrity by~putting into
9 2| a true and~indefatigable political bee. This walking Bayle
10 2| himself. In short, with his political~Hephaestion the minister
11 2| play her own game with this~political roue; and Monsieur des Lupeaulx
12 2| studied. As he heard~these political confidences, however, a
13 3| was nothing more than a~political office-holder, of little
14 3| an unconscious part in a political intrigue resulting~from
15 4| government official; he is~a political character, however; and
16 4| utmost indifference to the political intrigues of the bureaus.
17 4| eleven. There he listened to political discussions, his arms~crossed
18 5| fitted to deal with the political filibusters of other~cabinets,
19 5| full of plans such as a political party lays upon the~shoulders
20 5| their first struggles in political life~these men, less old
21 5| schemers or financial and~political lobbyists where the opinions
22 5| employed~the resources of political dishonesty, lies, and calumnies,
23 5| reform with the schemes of~political and self-interested talkers.~ ~
24 5| other things to attend to; political matters~are apt to interfere
25 6| instrument in the pursuit of high political fortune. She~understands
26 7| there's~no need to discuss political matters now,--these assassins
27 7| apparent artlessness of this political swindler~prevented her from
28 8| that she did not meddle in~political matters, and besides, she
29 8| statesman must do in our political sphere as Napoleon~did in
30 8| Ah! you don't understand political exigencies."~ ~During this
31 8| Saillard. "We are none of us political intriguers; WE don't~go
32 8| whole~Jesuitical Chapter as political, administrative, civil,
33 8| they exist at all without~political discussions? Can they even
34 8| the 'Constitutionel,' 'the political horizon.'"~ ~Poiret. "I
35 8| there is no leakage. Our political and administrative kitchen
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