Chapter
1 1| and ease of life. When the worthy auctioneer saw his son-in-law~
2 2| thousand francs is always a worthy official, the cashier~is
3 3| mantel-pieces and ceilings, worthy~of Versailles, together
4 3| bargains picked up by the worthy~widow,--pictures bought
5 3| arms of Hercules, hands worthy of Domitian, a~stomach which
6 4| comfortable, with the face of a worthy capitalist. As~to morals,
7 4| brought from China, which the worthy man keeps in his collection
8 5| to inquire after our most worthy and respectable~director,
9 5| intolerable anagrams when the worthy Monsieur de la Billardiere
10 5| with the administration. My worthy coadjutor, Monsieur~Clergeot,
11 5| Baudoyer. "Yes, the worthy man is dying. The two ministers
12 5| the last sacraments. The worthy man strongly recommended~
13 5| a dozen lines about the worthy late director~into the papers;
14 6| made you think that the worthy and honorable Monsieur Rabourdin,
15 6| that beautiful monstrance,~worthy of a cathedral. You, who
16 6| duck."~ ~"'The place of the worthy Monsieur de la Billardiere
17 6| The place of the late worthy de la Billardiere is vacant;
18 8| any intriguing," said~the worthy Saillard. "We are none of
19 8| whole matter in a maxim worthy of~Larochefoucault: Officials
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