Chapter
1 1| escape from those~perpetual ministerial oscillations which interfered
2 1| majority systematically ministerial. An administration founded~
3 1| be invited to the great~ministerial solemnities, to win listeners
4 2| express the wish to sit on the ministerial benches. The minister~guessed
5 2| lawyer rather than that of a ministerial officer. Eyes~glazed by
6 2| and pledges~given to the ministerial divinities! how many visits
7 2| appointment began, after a ministerial dinner which preceded one
8 2| not contemptibly reduce ministerial emoluments, nor save,~as
9 2| The cashier caught the ministerial~pair at the dawn of official
10 2| notice of him.~Saillard was a ministerial henchman absolutely incapable
11 4| and a chief of staff.~This ministerial apprentice decamps when
12 4| evening, the day after the ministerial reception and~Madame Rabourdin'
13 4| dramatic critic to a leading~ministerial journal, in which he also
14 4| and received~in all the ministerial salons, he was nevertheless
15 4| haunted the bureaus of the ministerial departments before he can~
16 6| coats, went on in all the~ministerial offices. That precious thirty
17 6| the printing-office of the ministerial journal (where I carried
18 6| explained after dinner, when the~ministerial organ (bought and sent up
19 6| counteract the effect of the~ministerial article. You must go alone,
20 6| refuse:--~ ~"Yesterday a ministerial journal plainly indicated
21 6| than the piety on~which the ministerial organ laid so much stress.
22 6| He knew so well what the ministerial organ would contain that
23 6| if you have not read the ministerial~journal I advise you to
24 6| Corinthians in our pious ministerial journal, and the reply~Epistle
25 7| against you' (for even the~ministerial journals which I influence
26 7| confidential air. "To the usual ministerial parties they are what the~'
27 7| went on with a round of ministerial compliments.~ ~"But, Monseigneur,"
28 8| the salon,--two or~three ministerial deputies, a few men of influence,
29 8| and insolent; it hampers ministerial action, stifles projects,~
|