Chapter
1 1| conviction entering some of the best minds~smothered many statements
2 2| which~drops plumb upon the best bit of meat in the middle
3 2| he could be sure~of the best dinner. Every morning he
4 3| early so~as to choose the best seats, and found much entertainment
5 3| duty led her to keep up as best she could a~favorable opinion
6 3| to attain them. All her best affections~found their vocation
7 3| journalist,~Derville, one of the best heads in the law courts,
8 4| exact sciences~and did his best to repress it, mentally
9 4| of Baudoyer,~and did his best to support him. Jean-Jaques
10 4| a rendezvous~for all our best artists and orators. Colleville'
11 5| overwhelmed, he now sought~for the best course to follow under the
12 5| have~so often dressed in my best for audience with the kings
13 5| six francs a yard in the best shop in the rue de~la Paix,--
14 5| administration which sets its best friends~against itself,
15 5| Machiavelli, in short, all the best known of our great men,
16 6| an~appointment is in the best interests of the administration."~[
17 7| for he still thought it best to make a show of harshness. "
18 7| on his happiness. To the best of~married lives there come
19 7| the same ground with the best financier of the~epoch,--
20 8| asking himself~how he could best incite a clamor against
21 8| court is a boudoir,~the best way to get in is through
22 8| France, the country with the best civil service in Europe,
23 8| following question: Which is the best organized~State; the one
24 8| administration, the purest and best on the globe has~rendered
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