Chapter
1 1| ladder the young man would certainly rise to the higher ranks
2 1| said of her husband: "He certainly has a good deal of sense
3 1| undermining evil lies here. Certainly a nation does not seem~threatened
4 2| general-~secretary he would certainly have been a journalist.
5 5| you don't help him he will certainly be dismissed in a~couple
6 5| under our noses, which will certainly be~given to some bloated
7 5| mistaken; des Lupeaulx had certainly~seen the document which
8 6| would regret it? Not you, certainly, for you will~be made under-head-clerk
9 6| under ten days. It will certainly not be known before New-Year'
10 6| the place, though it was certainly not~due to him.~ ~When Saillard
11 6| he ought to be silent.~ ~"Certainly, certainly," said old Saillard,
12 6| be silent.~ ~"Certainly, certainly," said old Saillard, thinking
13 6| Monsieur Baudoyer--which, certainly, is~a nobility as good as
14 6| reply.~Monsieur Rabourdin certainly has talent, but a man who
15 7| life were unknown would certainly have learned~for the rest
16 7| The general-secretary was certainly the last~man Madame Rabourdin
17 7| with a look which would~certainly have made a guilty woman
18 7| last mistress, "Paris is certainly unique. It produces--~whence
19 7| before I came that I would certainly not have~the bad taste to
20 8| misfortunes.~ ~"But she certainly did a great deal to attract
21 8| Congregation of Jesus (admissible~certainly as confronting the bold
22 8| eagerly; "six years' toil~certainly deserves two or three hours
23 8| amazingly useful."~ ~Baudoyer. "Certainly!"~ ~Des Lupeaulx. "If only
|