Chapter
1 1| she sometimes stopped him short when he~began an explanation,
2 1| of the administrators; in short, it spun those lilliputian~
3 1| the country districts.~In short, the State will see from
4 1| advance her interests. In short, she gathered~an agreeable
5 2| cannot say for himself. In short, with his political~Hephaestion
6 2| rather too square, and with short nails--the hand of a~satrap.
7 2| and gray trousers, and the short close surtout~coat of the
8 3| yet been~recognized; in short, a chaos of bargains picked
9 3| another obsolete name for a short gown~or jacket. She continued
10 3| to a post of eminence. In~short, silent and uncommunicative
11 3| the frigid lips and the short~chin. The forehead was low
12 4| with white hair cropped~short like a brush; stout, thickset,
13 4| of~a government office. Short in stature but well-formed,
14 4| for hydrostatic lamps,--in short, all the infinitely little
15 4| government office is, in short, a microcosm of~society,
16 5| breakfast-~hour suddenly cut short his meditation.~ ~"His Excellency
17 5| Guises,~Machiavelli, in short, all the best known of our
18 6| interposed his wife, cutting him short. "I see I~am forced to betray
19 7| a domestic carnival, in short. The bold des~Lupeaulx followed
20 7| Celestine,~cutting her husband short at his fifth sentence. "
21 7| you insist on cutting~me short and substituting your ideas
22 8| was divinely dressed. In short, it is~quite certain that
23 8| facts about their lives; in~short, the reason why his friends
24 8| the court, the clergy,--in short, everybody; and you'll get~
25 8| paper of some kind,~giving short histories of all the officials.
26 8| his present~salary.~ ~"In short, here we all are. Listen
27 8| office--" [Phellion stopped short, caught the young man in
28 8| must needs renounce for a short time. I, too, dear heart,
29 8| without making them wait; in short, he hasn't a bit~of dignity.
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