Chapter
1 1| them; Celestine's ambition, far from~lessening, only increased
2 1| which genius ought to cut. Far from accepting~the pettiness
3 1| hundred millions~annually had far more virtue than the accumulation
4 1| unknown to his wife. But so far he had only dared to conceive
5 2| horse." His position, so far as it went, was a~good one,
6 2| any one ever found out how~far his stupidity could go;
7 3| resembling hoops.~ ~"You go too far, Madame Baudoyer," he said,
8 3| understand Monsieur des Lupeaulx far~better than the minister
9 4| peculiarities. They knew how far to~trust the clerks with
10 4| could make himself useful. Far~too noble to injure a clerk,
11 4| little tricks which go so far to conciliate general good-will.
12 4| chief adorers, but who, so far, had failed to~obtain a
13 4| each a~larger salary and far heavier work. Men are neither
14 5| beauty. Madame Rabourdin is far superior to Madame Colleville,"
15 5| which evidently reached far~and high, without allowing
16 5| presents a~contrast that is far more dangerous in France
17 5| and impractical~requests. Far from coming fresh to his
18 5| parliamentary optics, and he was far~indeed from imagining how
19 6| staring at him~stupidly.~ ~"Far be it from me to do that,"
20 7| undergarment,~more attractive far than when it rises gracefully
21 7| promise that might lead her far.~ ~"And they say that statesmen
22 7| instead of reducing them!~So far from lessening the public
23 7| she felt she had gone too far, and ran to him, seized
24 7| administer its government? We are far indeed from the days when
25 8| official look and the dolce far niente habits of a government~
26 8| s the answer,--that's as far as I have got" [reads]:--~ ~"
27 8| would be satisfied to get as far as this; but Napoleon went~
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