Chapter
1 1| reducing the ministers to three heads he suppressed~departments
2 2| certain peculiar turn to their~heads. They agree indifferently
3 3| Derville, one of the best heads in the law courts, the Comte
4 4| commonly kept sacred to heads of bureaus and~divisions;
5 4| and antechambers of the heads of the two~bureaus, Monsieur
6 4| Savoie,--one to serve the heads of the bureaus, the~other
7 4| of the clique. The clever heads in the offices laughed~much
8 5| was about to happen; for heads of divisions do not die
9 5| principal clerks and stick their heads on fowls, put them in a~
10 5| have geese and ducks with heads like ours,--you understand!
11 5| and Colleville raise their heads in amazement; they~all lay
12 5| a great measure of~young heads; no sovereign can ever forget
13 6| condescend to.~ ~The various heads of divisions and bureaus
14 6| Monsieur Clergeot, shook their heads and said, "Habent sua sidera~
15 6| old cafe, like two cameo heads,~cold and impassible, in
16 6| as they all nodded their heads.~ ~"But it is none of my
17 6| shake of their~metallic heads. An onlooker would have
18 7| aristocracy by~levelling a few heads, but you can't subdue a
19 8| fall of grand, illustrious heads,~Why thus amazed, insensate
20 8| What does he mean with his 'heads~that fall'?"~ ~Fleury. "'
21 8| that fall'?"~ ~Fleury. "'Heads that fell?' why, think of
22 8| sixty,~not more, dangerous heads, whose schemes are in proportion
23 8| govern is to know those heads~well, and either to chop
24 8| New-Year's day, to~all the heads of divisions. It is quite
25 8| a nation~can do without heads of divisions, general-secretaries
26 8| in three ministries the heads of all~the parties in the
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