Chapter
1 1| to untie and which genius ought to cut. Far from accepting~
2 1| according to Rabourdin,~ought to be unwilling to simplify
3 1| ministry of the interior ought in like~manner to combine
4 1| belles lettres. All patronage ought to~flow directly from the
5 3| utter commonness; yet who ought to be~sketched, because
6 3| vigorous household work ought now to be rewarded with~
7 4| times,--for after all one ought to tell the~truth to an
8 4| to work in his day! You ought to have seen how~they scratched
9 4| you think a clerk really ought to be."~ ~"A government
10 4| in a young ladies' school ought to be,~he wore fine linen,
11 5| Tournon. The court, which ought~to count for the other three
12 5| more mind than an author ought to have," returned des~Lupeaulx,
13 5| do business~together. I ought to be at the Council now;
14 6| government offices; and you ought to slip in a little flummery
15 6| t like to look at what I ought not to see."~ ~Phellion [
16 6| Gaudron, before whom he ought to be silent.~ ~"Certainly,
17 6| more respectful. But you ought to know, first of all, whether
18 6| Royal Highness."~ ~"You ought to designate the vacant
19 7| commonplace idea! The budget ought, on the~contrary, to reach
20 7| lessening the public debt, you ought to increase the~creditors.
21 7| loans there;~above all, they ought not to let foreigners draw
22 7| Law's fatal ill-~luck; he ought to exhibit the power of
23 8| public places,~the matter ought to be taken into the police-courts."~ ~
24 8| continuing]. "Quest.--What ought the understanding to know?~ ~"
25 8| a noble man!--a man who ought to~be minister!"~ ~Poiret [
26 8| did not also see~that it ought not to be communicated to
27 8| minister]. "No doubt something~ought to be done."~ ~De la Briere [
28 8| aware of the respect that ought to be paid to you;~Laurent
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