Chapter
1 1| education enabled her to speak to~every one in his or her
2 1| greatly benefited, not to speak of the saving in costs of
3 2| opposition.~ ~The minister, or to speak correctly, des Lupeaulx
4 3| cleansing soap; not to~swear, to speak her kind of French, to wear
5 3| it in this house."~ ~"You speak like the 'Constitutionel,'"
6 3| lost all your friends! Do~speak; do, pray, tell us something,"
7 3| leave Monsieur~Gaudron to speak to the Dauphine and don'
8 3| left the old fop to go and speak with Madame de Chessel,
9 5| matter of~which I desire to speak."~ ~"Poor man!" said des
10 6| you, Monsieur~Fleury, to speak respectfully of his wife."~ ~
11 6| Monseigneur the~coadjutor will speak of you to the King. When
12 6| they learn there how to speak to God and his saints."~ ~"
13 6| all alone? Is it safe to speak?" said Mitral, looking~carefully
14 6| fifty thousand francs I speak of,--good land, well worth
15 7| While you are trying to speak to~the minister, and before
16 7| study your plan; you shall speak at your ease,--I~will listen
17 7| his head that he wished to speak~to her privately.~ ~"Well,
18 7| petitioner."~ ~"No, no, speak freely. Places asked in
19 7| was no~greater than I. I speak to you thus because we are
20 8| Bixiou. "Well, then I want to speak with them."~ ~Dutocq [dryly]. "
21 8| morning when I first~sought to speak with you, that my purpose
22 8| for once to my level and speak in a language I can~understand?"~ ~
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