Chapter
1 1| pension, the government official thought everything permissible~
2 1| recasting of the~clerical official staff. To employ fewer man,
3 1| and the courage of~this official.~ ~Rabourdin's plan divided
4 1| thousand francs a year for each~official as an average, he estimated
5 1| the apathetic torpor of~an official broken down by the dulness
6 2| royal~household. His two official posts which appeared on
7 2| reception to amuse that official and his wife, and to pet
8 2| he was to set~about. This official sybarite dressed, dined,
9 2| house of this unimportant~official, des Lupeaulx made up his
10 2| turn a compliment. This official was the cashier of the~ministry,
11 2| ministerial~pair at the dawn of official delight, when the newly
12 2| francs is always a worthy official, the cashier~is sure not
13 3| the disease--of government official life. From this~point of
14 4| mansion, in which the vast official ocean of a ministry was
15 4| not precisely a government official; he is~a political character,
16 4| great work outside of his official~labors, and he was provoked
17 4| task conscientiously. His official~letters were written with
18 4| importance which a government official may acquire outside of~a
19 4| he was perhaps the only official of the ministry whose dress
20 4| Colleville, government~official in the mornings and first
21 5| chances. Knowing the~spirit of official life better than any one,
22 5| Nothing was~left to an official so placed but to send in
23 5| of an invitation to the official~Wednesdays; "but since you
24 6| the wife of a government~official?"~ ~Dutocq. "They both play
25 6| there it is printed,--in the official paper,~too!"~ ~"Dear Monsieur
26 8| now recovering their~usual official look and the dolce far niente
27 8| instead of a subordinate~official."~ ~Phellion [standing before
|