Chapter
1 1| him the coldly resigned air of one who has buried the
2 2| spectacles, and a worn-out air;~the natural skin blond,
3 3| purport and connection,~an air of treachery and police
4 3| replied, with a melancholy~air, in spite of the deep inward
5 4| Billardiere's man had the air of a gentleman-usher, an
6 4| dilettante listens to an air at the Opera. Silent in~
7 4| office, with his feet in the air resting on a wooden desk,
8 4| endeavoured to assume the air and manner of a wealthy~
9 4| to many a castle~in the air, to the dreams about which
10 4| task with the~collected air of a man who thinks and
11 4| livid~face and a melancholy air. "We never know," said Rabourdin,
12 4| atmospheric changes are the air of the~corridors, the masculine
13 5| Lupeaulx, with a conceited air. Then he turned round and
14 6| Phellion [with an elegaic air]. "Monsieur Rabourdin so
15 7| assuming an innocent, ingenuous air.~ ~"What a calumny!" cried
16 7| said. "Why that startled air?"~ ~"My dear," replied Rabourdin, "
17 7| looking at him with a vexed air which might very well pass~
18 7| Lupeaulx, with a~confidential air. "To the usual ministerial
19 7| himself she took the pretty~air of sauciness which women
20 7| general-secretary, bowing with an air of~profound respect, bordering
21 7| des Lupeaulx with a~piqued air.~ ~The women present all
22 8| principles of the grand air composed~by the sublime
23 8| Lupeaulx rose with a mysterious air, stood with his back~to
24 8| the bureaus with a calm air, and went at once into~Baudoyer'
25 8| Chamber?"~ ~Baudoyer [with an air that he imagined to be shrewd]. "
|