0-brave | bravo-custo | cut-a-faili | fails-huge | human-mecha | medal-polit | polyt-scari | scatt-thirt | thoma-zenit
bold = Main text
Chapter grey = Comment text
2001 4 | love which we must call~humanitarianism, the eldest son of deceased
2002 1 | important division and~the humblest copying-clerk; one is as
2003 4 | carry salaries to those humbugs who~stay away and do as
2004 8 | for one of us, and that's humiliating. He carries the~office letter-paper
2005 7 | the~same moment; her ears hummed under the pressure of the
2006 Add | Birotteau~The Unconscious Humoriists~ ~Godard, Joseph~The Middle
2007 4 | fixed principles, to marry a hunch-back with six thousand a year,~
2008 6 | the four thousand eight hundred-- Besides,~Baudoyer, my lad,
2009 5 | situated in Bohemia or Hungary,~or it may be Austria--"~ ~
2010 3 | how many of them can bear hunger, thirst, and penury without~
2011 4 | constant round~of dissipation. Hunter of grisettes, smoker, jester,
2012 5 | to know it! I have been hunting for it ever~since the accession
2013 7 | impatient to win his reward, had~hurried, beyond all precedent, the
2014 5 | minister, frowning, and~hurriedly interrupting him. "If you
2015 8 | on again]. "Good-bye." [Hurries out.]~ ~Thuillier. "He may
2016 3 | you mean?" she cried, in a hurt tone.~ ~"Yes; Monsieur de
2017 8 | they go on that way."~ ~"Hush, we're caught! somebody
2018 8 | bureau is the~clerk's shell, husk, pod. No clerk without a
2019 7 | but you can't subdue a hydra with thousands.~And is it
2020 4 | gas, jointed sockets~for hydrostatic lamps,--in short, all the
2021 3 | extraordinary~man. Pedantic and hypercritical, meddlesome and fault-finding,
2022 5 | government service adds hypocrisy to boot.~ ~The clerks of
2023 5 | administration continues to play the~hypocrite." [He makes a sign to the
2024 4 | went readily to~his pocket; ices and punch were bestowed
2025 5 | made its fortune by that identical colonial~product."~ ~Baudoyer [
2026 5 | foolishness,~that cube of idiocy, Baudoyer?"~ ~Dutocq [consequentially]. "
2027 5 | than that, he becomes an~idiot! Come, gentlemen, now's
2028 1 | the indolence of a mere idler and the~thoughtfulness of
2029 1 | the~government offices but idlers, incapables, or fools. Thus
2030 8 | Rabourdin and Baudoyer, after idling and gossiping since~the
2031 8 | thousand francs! The most ignoble of all wretchedness had
2032 8 | from men of talent whom you~ignore. Don't you know that in
2033 3 | CHAPTER III~THE TEREDOS NAVALIS, OTHERWISE
2034 5 | paper]. "Listen!~ ~"A H. V. il cedera;~De S. C. l. d. partira;~
2035 7 | polishing the glasses. The ill-advised individual who~might happen,
2036 7 | that forbids me to mingle ill-assorted colors and put together~
2037 4 | person; his clothes~were ill-cut, his trousers bagged, he
2038 7 | dressing-gown, her hair ill-dressed, and her feet in old~slippers,
2039 4 | the same dark corridors,~ill-lighted stairways, doors with oval
2040 5 | allows himself a last~stake; ill-luck had given him as adversary
2041 6 | he heard the creaking~of ill-oiled machinery.~ ~"Come, Gigonnet,
2042 5 | each other like birds of ill-omen.]~ ~Dutocq [whispering]. "
2043 3 | His feet were large and~ill-shod. From the chain of his watch
2044 1 | perfecting~process, always ill-understood, threaten the well-being
2045 3 | with faith. Illusion is~illimitable faith. Now the supernumerary
2046 8 | the miserly~and profoundly illogical habits of the provinces
2047 2 | Sometimes great geniuses illumine~themselves in this way.
2048 3 | inspiring us with faith. Illusion is~illimitable faith. Now
2049 4 | whom they set up a romance~illustrated with stupid love letters,
2050 4 | later went by the name of~"illustration." The influence of the Ducs
2051 8 | brain the clearest possible image of constitutional government"~[
2052 3 | There you go with your imaginations!" said Baudoyer; "leave
2053 5 | and he was far~indeed from imagining how his confidence would
2054 1 | accusation is a charge of imbecility. She sketched out~for him
2055 1 | led by their~bureaus to imitate this practice of kings.
2056 4 | collars, spotless gloves,~and immaculate hats. A ring with a coat
2057 8 | might as well talk about~immaterial stone."~ ~Poiret. "Don't
2058 6 | did not shrink from the immensity of the price, the~church
2059 4 | consciences by recounting immoral~jests, and then reported
2060 8 | said that he created it immortal;~in other words, the soul
2061 1 | property which should be more impartial than the~existing list,
2062 3 | with herself, instead of imparting her~ideas to those around
2063 7 | look at the old beau, who, impatient to win his reward, had~hurried,
2064 7 | have inspired a~sentence so imperative, so insolently curt and
2065 1 | behavior~through almost imperceptible motions. Her attitude and
2066 6 | enter~the lists against impiety without disadvantage at
2067 1 | again. All~remuneration implies something furnished. To
2068 8 | Baudoyer were obtained by~the importunity of the curate of Saint-Paul'
2069 7 | the only punishment that I~impose--"~ ~"IMPOSE!" she cried. "
2070 3 | my dear child," said the imposing Madame Rabourdin, who~wished
2071 3 | He begins to perceive the impossibilities~of his career; he hears
2072 5 | a jumble of schemes and impractical~requests. Far from coming
2073 1 | Xavier Rabourdin, deeply impressed by the trials and poverty
2074 8 | gratuities depend on the~last impressions made upon the minds of masters.
2075 4 | the startling fact that an imprint of the head of~Napoleon
2076 4 | making some discovery or some improvement which would bring him a~
2077 3 | Rabourdin, kindly. "Don't be so imprudent again,~but never mind now.
2078 8 | put ideas and generous impulses aside; attend only to your
2079 7 | shoes (for silk-satin~is inadmissible in deep mourning) were of
2080 5 | government, applicable or inapplicable to the affairs of France.
2081 7 | understand that she is the sole incentive of my whole work. How wrong-~
2082 3 | well-earned repose, she was incessantly employed in knitting her~
2083 7 | old coxcomb related the incident as~follows: "A woman who
2084 8 | himself~how he could best incite a clamor against his chief
2085 8 | public~exposure to the inclemencies of Parisian weather."~ ~"
2086 8 | Monseigneur,--I have the honor to inclose to your Excellency my~resignation.
2087 3 | over them. Her bust was inclosed in~what was called a "casaquin,"
2088 8 | itself. Is that~dinner to include the clerks who are dismissed?"~ ~
2089 1 | proved~their existence, including the rich) is it not better
2090 8 | he had lost his bet the incorrigible joker~thought it amusing
2091 1 | they discover how~commerce increases, and life is ameliorated
2092 1 | her well-~to-do tax-payers increasing. By doing away with the
2093 8 | helped him to show the new incumbent~all the administrative difficulties
2094 1 | hatred which all reformers~incur takes its rise here. Removals
2095 8 | You understand me? Inde iroe! There must be a general
2096 8 | there?"~ ~Fleury. "Amazingly indecorous, to say the least."~ ~Phellion [
2097 2 | knowledge like a true and~indefatigable political bee. This walking
2098 1 | pear-tree, these officials indemnified themselves~amply, and in
2099 1 | carried into all her plans the independence of~ideas which characterized
2100 7 | dishabille. There is something indescribably alluring to the~eye in a
2101 2 | aspects of Italy, Brazil, or India, returns to his own land
2102 3 | gloves, well~cleaned with india-rubber, as little as he could.
2103 6 | ministerial journal plainly indicated as the probable~successor
2104 7 | to perceive the slightest~indications of the result on their impassible
2105 2 | their~heads. They agree indifferently with whatever is said before
2106 5 | him to die~soon." [Godard, indignant at the hoax, goes off grumbling.]~"
2107 4 | sharp, aggressive, and indiscreet, he did mischief~for mischief'
2108 4 | would bestow on those they indiscriminately called Jesuits. Belonging~
2109 4 | real feeling, bound almost indissolubly~to Thuillier, the model
2110 4 | officials, collectively and individually. They~had no better way
2111 8 | created it of a nature one and indivisible; the~destructibility thereof
2112 4 | eyelashes and~lack of eyebrows induced the relentless Bixiou to
2113 7 | thirty thousand does not indulge in.~Consequently, every
2114 1 | happiness. Besides all such indulgences, the foolish spoiling of
2115 7 | The~true Parisian woman, indulgent to all curiosity that she
2116 8 | maintain the paper and stamp industries!~Suppose it is rather fussy
2117 5 | such attacks~he opposed the inert force of a substance which
2118 1 | they created a power of inertia and named it "Report."~Let
2119 1 | constitutional~government, which was, inevitably, the friend of all mediocrities,
2120 8 | was changed to something~inexpressibly tender. "I too have made
2121 8 | well, why did you make that inf--that~odi--that hideous caricature?"~ ~
2122 3 | had toiled steadily from infancy in a home~where the customs
2123 2 | Restoration~their utter inferiority in comparison with the events
2124 1 | acquirements, affable with his~inferiors, holding his equals at great
2125 8 | the devil, in~one of his infernal flashes, showed her the
2126 1 | are now~destroyed by the infiltrating littleness which gradually
2127 4 | lamps,--in short, all the infinitely little inventions~of material
2128 3 | of religious~ties, by the inflexibility of its customs, by one solitary
2129 2 | however, took advantage of an influx of~office-seekers, to slip
2130 2 | shoulders, as much as to inform his wife that des Lupeaulx
2131 3 | feet. A third is the hidden informant of a~powerful journalist.
2132 8 | the work of this infamous informer; for it is in the hands~
2133 5 | little people manage to infringe upon it. Business~itself
2134 5 | superiority as they explained ingenious theories of~government,
2135 7 | added,~assuming an innocent, ingenuous air.~ ~"What a calumny!"
2136 5 | calling,--a most~powerful ingredient in hatred.~ ~When des Lupeaulx
2137 2 | manner. Rabourdin's study had inherited the late~hangings of the
2138 6 | idol. He leaves a son, who inherits his loyalty and his~talents.'"~ ~
2139 3 | charge of a~directory who initiates him into what Bilboquet,
2140 7 | believe,~however, how the injudicious conduct of the aristocracy
2141 8 | turned bold for one day,~injudiciously bold. Later on, the "Doctrine"
2142 2 | to~artists by simply not injuring them and by furthering their
2143 4 | a large~black table with inkstand, pens, and paper, and benches,
2144 2 | sparkled the brass~arabesques inlaid in tortoise-shell of the
2145 4 | the power of~guessing the inmost wishes of others; he knew
2146 7 | preparations for entrance into the~inner circle of the ministry.
2147 3 | Old Saillard would say, innocently, "Isn't she clever, that~
2148 4 | of a gentleman-usher, an innovation~which gave an aspect of
2149 1 | constant repetition, had~inoculated him with her own belief
2150 8 | exactitude, the genius of inquisition, the sharp-~sightedness
2151 8 | France possesses the most inquisitorial, fussy,~ferreting, scribbling,
2152 7 | voracious jaws of a shark,--insatiable,~always open, seeking whom
2153 8 | namely, that the Academy of Inscriptions and Belles-lettres, which~
2154 4 | bears the buzzing of an insect; he was not even annoyed
2155 7 | monarchy would not be as insecure as I now think it is.~What
2156 8 | heads,~Why thus amazed, insensate that thou art,~ ~"to find
2157 6 | difficulty. He took pains to insert it in a~conspicuous place.
2158 8 | he told me~so."~ ~"What's inside the letter?" asked Antoine,
2159 3 | habits and manners,~dull and insipid though they be, are not
2160 7 | anything with you because you insist on cutting~me short and
2161 8 | requiring reimbursement or insisting on security."~ ~Baudoyer. "
2162 8 | myself think~it slow and insolent; it hampers ministerial
2163 7 | secretary amused them and instigated one~of those pretty little
2164 7 | discords; it is~my natural instinct as an artist. We women have
2165 7 | the liberal journal was instituted by an old money-lender to
2166 1 | disappear. Every one who seeks instruction on~this point can look at
2167 8 | minister's reception-room, more~instructive than the one we have just
2168 1 | some officials eke out~the insufficiency of their husband's salary.
2169 4 | nor in the monarchy,--~insulting and disparaging everything
2170 5 | every~day, and there is no insurance office where the chances
2171 8 | entire~capital if he could insure himself against LEAKAGE?"~ ~
2172 2 | opened~a breach by which insurrection entered the citadel, des
2173 7 | you love~me; you love me intelligently."~ ~"To-night, dear child,"
2174 4 | torment them, asking when they intend to pay, and threatening
2175 7 | to me you would never had interceded to keep your~chief clerk;
2176 8 | he resolved to remain and~intercept his Excellency as he got
2177 5 | courtyard; for the glance he had intercepted the night before between~
2178 1 | perpetual and~harassing interference. Rabourdin's scheme retained
2179 5 | there is a fatal law which interferes with~all administrative
2180 2 | ministers and made himself their intermediary with~their successors, diffusing
2181 6 | Baudoyer.~ ~"Monsieur le cure," interposed his wife, cutting him short. "
2182 5 | uneasy," said des Lupeaulx, interposing between the minister~and
2183 7 | answering her glance with an~interrogative look which made the poor
2184 5 | slipped the bolt, fearing interruption. While~he was thus employed,
2185 6 | Rabourdin unless higher powers intervened."~ ~Bixiou. "Gentlemen,
2186 5 | keep this hour for private intimacies and affections, a good~many
2187 4 | painting,~but in spite of his intimacy with Joseph Bridau, his
2188 3 | a rather pretty~range of intonation, from sharp to sweet. Elisabeth
2189 4 | incapable of perseverance, intoxicated with~pleasure, and who acted
2190 1 | etc. Forced back to his~intrenchments, the father made the serious
2191 3 | presupposed labor that was more intricate and arduous than that of
2192 8 | are none of us political intriguers; WE don't~go to select parties
2193 5 | minister which~Rabourdin had intrusted to La Briere. Rabourdin
2194 4 | he~felt that his head was inundated,--he, who never perspired!
2195 3 | Monsieur Cardot,~who was invariably asked, did as Rabourdin
2196 4 | shop-girls, who had tried to~inveigle him. Slim and lean, of medium
2197 8 | all that; perhaps you~are inventing it."~ ~Dutocq. "Do you want
2198 4 | all the infinitely little inventions~of material civilization
2199 1 | inspiring an artist, helping an~inventor and pushing his interests,
2200 4 | the man with brains who invents the~subject and maps out
2201 3 | predecessor, and let him invest them at five per~cent in
2202 3 | cent for the~sixty thousand invested in the foundry, besides
2203 1 | her husband, insisted on investing the remaining~hundred thousand
2204 1 | movement of money; or it invests~it at a higher rate than
2205 5 | clerk as he entered, and not inviting him to sit down. "You have
2206 2 | them; indeed, the entrance~involves expenses of all kinds which
2207 8 | Madame~Rabourdin, while he inwardly asked himself, "Which shall
2208 8 | You understand me? Inde iroe! There must be a general
2209 7 | introduced her at the most iron-bound court in Europe as to~quarterings
2210 3 | service? I am glad I am an~iron-master; my customers know where
2211 3 | irregularly the~otherwise irregular outline of her face. Her
2212 3 | triangular than oval, ended irregularly the~otherwise irregular
2213 5 | If twenty-three years of irreproachable services~may claim a favor,
2214 5 | Emperor Napoleon."~ ~Godard [irritated at Colleville's tone]. "
2215 1 | on licenses, where now an~irritating array of taxes existed as
2216 5 | countess rose with some irritation.~ ~"You are the master of
2217 6 | discovered how to do it, and he is--"~ ~"Elisabeth"; cried Gigonnet,
2218 4 | foreign orders of Christ, Isabella, Saint Wladimir,~etc., member
2219 3 | Elisabeth and introduced~young Isadore Baudoyer to the family with
2220 8 | Fleury. "I say he is a Judas Iscariot. Who is he?"~ ~Phellion [
2221 6 | Fontanon."~ ~----~ ~"Monsieur Isidore-Charles-Thomas Baudoyer, representing one
2222 2 | foot~of Monte Rosa, with an island resting on the calm waters,
2223 1 | pension list had just~been issued, and on it Rabourdin saw
2224 2 | tomb out of which nought issues to contradict the epitaph~
2225 8 | are down."~ ~ ~ ~CHAPTER IX~ ~THE RESIGNATION~ ~By midnight
2226 3 | name for a short gown~or jacket. She continued to wear a
2227 Add | Firm of Nucingen~ ~Falleix, Jacques~The Thirteen~Scenes from
2228 6 | Poiret. "I retire in January."~ ~Bixiou. "Is it possible?
2229 3 | order; to wit, a magnificent Japanese dessert set, and all~the
2230 4 | they felt the~slightest jar of the fabric.~ ~On a Thursday
2231 1 | reforms~without too roughly jarring the existing state of things
2232 7 | other like the voracious jaws of a shark,--insatiable,~
2233 Add | Classes~ ~Granson, Athanase~Jealousies of a Country Town~ ~Gruget,
2234 Add | Start in Life~ ~Gobseck, Jean-Esther Van~Gobseck~Father Goriot~
2235 Add | Daughter of Eve~ ~Bixiou, Jean-Jacques~The Purse~A Bachelor's Establishment~
2236 4 | his best to support him. Jean-Jaques Bixiou was the grandson~
2237 7 | Louvois, Colbert,~Richelieu, Jeannin, Villeroy, Sully,--Sully,
2238 8 | by four griffon's-claws jessant from the sides of the~escutcheon,
2239 7 | which~accompanied these jesting and contemptuous words,
2240 4 | sunstroke when he~heard that Jesuit of a Dutocq had got here
2241 8 | Grand Almoner and the whole~Jesuitical Chapter as political, administrative,
2242 8 | conglomeration~of Arabs, Jews, Genoese, Genevese, Greeks,
2243 1 | a household compelled to jog~in the common round. Those
2244 6 | division."~ ~Vimeux. "I'll join in the bet; will you, Monsieur
2245 4 | matches and portable gas, jointed sockets~for hydrostatic
2246 4 | children, was fat, round, and~jolly, whereas Thuillier, "the
2247 7 | with the fatigue of~his journey, had gone to bed.~ ~"You
2248 8 | laugh. I live in a state of jovial~admiration of the spectacle
2249 8 | interests of all~nations would joyfully unite against that evil
2250 8 | spectacles were sad and his eyes joyous; the~glasses, however, obscured
2251 8 | Fleury. "I say he is a Judas Iscariot. Who is he?"~ ~
2252 5 | and quibbled instead of~judging; he had criticised effects
2253 6 | and full of expedients and judicial precautions, believed~the
2254 4 | he regarded as a~solemn juggler) in his hatred to Rabourdin
2255 6 | that of the hangman who jumps upon a victim's shoulders~
2256 5 | He took upon~himself to justify the saying of Pythagoras, '
2257 4 | dined for twenty sous at Katcomb's, and lodged in a~furnished
2258 6 | his absence a prey to the keenest~excitement; for the relation
2259 2 | considered the money and the~keeper of money, the contents and
2260 4 | auditors, or again, book-~keepers.~ ~Paved like the corridor,
2261 2 | refined evils escape their ken; the~adroitness that triumphs
2262 2 | mediocrities who~form the kernel of the political world.
2263 4 | and~always carried the keys of his apartment about with
2264 4 | and a pair of dark-colored~kid gloves. His walk and bearing,
2265 8 | when I copied it. I have killed my~benefactor; I shall die
2266 4 | vaudevilles, for he was really~a kind-hearted fellow and a good comrade,
2267 7 | always punished through their kindnesses! But,"~she added, "he is
2268 8 | wife's~tears and saw her kneeling before him. Celestine had
2269 8 | and then falling on his knees~before Rabourdin]. "I have
2270 1 | fresh, and crowded~it with knick-knacks that were then in vogue;
2271 3 | to be very careful not to knock over a lamp or~the bric-a-brac
2272 3 | the purpose of the three knocks given at the Theatre-~Francais.
2273 7 | had come at last. Having~labored for many years to satisfy
2274 3 | were playing "The~Chinese Laborer." Elisabeth thought "the
2275 4 | touching in~this happy and laborious mediocrity. Feeling that
2276 2 | delightful little lake, like the Lac d'Orta at the foot~of Monte
2277 8 | lay hold of, coats,~gold lace, cheese, men, women, and
2278 4 | hat with a narrow brim and laced shoes. He was~always complaining
2279 7 | velvet paw on her~mistress's laces with the claws carefully
2280 2 | and he might have been lackey to the~bank of France; a
2281 8 | language is unparliamentary and lacks the courtesy and~consideration
2282 4 | Bolivar, and Beranger. Foy, Lafitte, and Casimir Delavigne he
2283 1 | expenditure. Many a night he had lain awake~unknown to his wife.
2284 7 | economy of mousseline de laine, which needs no~washing,
2285 7 | robe was of mousseline de laine--a material~which the manufacturers
2286 2 | way a delightful little lake, like the Lac d'Orta at
2287 8 | Bixiou. "Forward, march! that lampoon shall go from end to end
2288 1 | it persisted in~being a land-holder and a manufacturer. To bring
2289 1 | taxable in times of peace.~Land-taxes should always be held in
2290 5 | other question of the public lands; with~liberalism as with
2291 4 | place~elsewhere. Tall, lean, lanky, and solemn in appearance,
2292 3 | like the figures in a magic lantern, was~subjected to no such
2293 5 | is the archaeological and lapidarial~abbreviation of the name
2294 3 | Archimedes, nor~Leibnitz, nor Laplace has ever reckoned, the distance
2295 6 | Grand Almoner subscribe as largely as we do, if he~wants its
2296 1 | cities, and obtained the largest revenues from the remainder,
2297 8 | matter in a maxim worthy of~Larochefoucault: Officials with salaries
2298 3 | came a splendid dinner,~lasting at least five hours, to
2299 8 | Dauphine, the clergy, and lastly the court, all~want Baudoyer;
2300 7 | him just as he~was, all lathered with soap-suds, and kissed
2301 Add | Chouans~Cesar Birotteau~ ~Laudigeois~The Middle Classes~ ~Louis
2302 7 | name of his divinity. To launch his supposed mistress successfully,
2303 4 | the great comic players.~ ~Launched into the world of actors
2304 1 | own~mind a hatred for the laundry lists and the duty of overlooking
2305 4 | obvious;~in regiments, in law-courts, you will find the elements
2306 4 | hottest of dog-~days to put a layer of lard under the lining
2307 3 | hardly visible through~the layers of dust that time had collected.
2308 5 | politician at once. Even a lazy man, who does nothing but
2309 5 | upon the~shoulders of a leader,--matters of private interest
2310 1 | ambitious and dishonest leaders,~the Civil Service officials
2311 1 | themselves be guided by the leading-strings of the Report. Nothing~important
2312 5 | here it is."~ ~Fleury [leaning over Colleville's desk]. "
2313 2 | mudhole, but gracefully leaping it,~intrepid Voltairean,
2314 3 | Isidore, highly respected leather-~dressers in the rue Censier,
2315 3 | Isidore, though the son of a leather-dresser, had~had the genius to study
2316 4 | He mimicked Dr. Gall when lecturing, till he made the~most starched
2317 1 | the budget~a cluster of leeches, and every year demands
2318 5 | coat, took a paper from the left-hand breast-pocket~and laid it
2319 8 | younger Branch could have legally carried out Charles X.'s
2320 4 | in~good clothes, wear a Leghorn bonnet with flowers, embroidered
2321 8 | administrators will want to legislate. The~government will try
2322 3 | resignation of a deputy, the very~legitimate desire of the general-secretary
2323 3 | neither Archimedes, nor~Leibnitz, nor Laplace has ever reckoned,
2324 6 | moment des Lupeaulx, coming leisurely downstairs to breakfast~
2325 7 | of the implacable money-~lender of the rue des Gres. Like
2326 7 | You do not know to what lengths my devotion can go," said
2327 4 | be~found elsewhere (see "Les Petits Bourgeois"). We may
2328 3 | establishment in the~rue de Lesdiguieres, who took an interest in
2329 1 | the administrations which lessened both their salaries and
2330 2 | shawl at the right moment, lets~herself be scolded and pushed
2331 7 | to our~gracious queen by letting loose a few dogs upon the
2332 1 | arts, sciences, and belles lettres. All patronage ought to~
2333 4 | use the microscope of the~Leuwenhoeks, the Malpighis, and the
2334 7 | a feudal aristocracy by~levelling a few heads, but you can'
2335 6 | her was the most powerful lever that could be used to~force
2336 1 | individual~share. A tax is a levy of money on things or persons
2337 1 | of indirect taxation. The levying of the taxes was~simplified
2338 2 | however, like that famous lexicon; he did not report all opinions~
2339 1 | but little, and are~not liable to disappear. After pointing
2340 4 | uneasiness what he called the liaison of~des Lupeaulx with Madame
2341 7 | himself; he is too great a liar to admit it, and~too clever
2342 2 | egotistical, supple and proud,~libertine and gourmand, grasping from
2343 4 | were sold at the University library under the name~of "Historical
2344 1 | the poorer tax-payers, the licences of retail dealers were taxed~
2345 3 | are married to~milliners, licensed tobacco dealers, women who
2346 1 | cultivation of vineyards, and on licenses, where now an~irritating
2347 8 | tiger in him; he likes to lick the blood of the wounds
2348 4 | with Joseph Bridau, his life-long friend,~he abandoned art
2349 4 | dim, his glance weak and~lifeless, his skin discolored and
2350 3 | fifty-seven years old, and her~lifetime of vigorous household work
2351 3 | convulsive movement with which he~lifted his legs in walking, like
2352 8 | other languages."~ ~Poiret [lifting his hands to heaven]. "Gracious
2353 8 | I knew that already" [he lifts Sebastien]. "You~are a child,
2354 4 | lower one pendent; the eyes light-~blue, and his figure above
2355 1 | expense of collecting them. To lighten the~burden of taxation is
2356 1 | to assess them better; if lightened, you increase the~volume
2357 2 | strip of deal there were ligneous fibres strong~enough to
2358 1 | position which can only be likened to that of Saint-Laurence
2359 8 | and Madame de Camps had likewise~departed, des Lupeaulx rose
2360 4 | content with his lot and liking work, he~found every one,
2361 1 | in short, it spun those lilliputian~threads which have chained
2362 8 | Phellion's desk, and all his limbs were limp as if struck by~
2363 8 | and all his limbs were limp as if struck by~lightning;
2364 4 | few defective teeth still lingered. His gray hair, flattened~
2365 2 | case might be.~Mysterious link by which many interests
2366 7 | a disdainful curl of her~lip. "Just think of governing
2367 6 | depends on the decision of the~liquidation committee."~ ~"How much
2368 1 | became involved in one of the~liquidations of the house of Nucingen,
2369 2 | assumed the character of a listener, and none was~ever more
2370 1 | ministerial solemnities, to win listeners and make them talk of her
2371 7 | Delphine de Nucingen, Madame de~Listomere, the Marquise d'Espard,
2372 5 | sometimes indeed the lamps are lit till after ten~o'clock;
2373 6 | said, "Habent sua sidera~lites." Saillard and Baudoyer
2374 4 | floor, strewn with a curious litter and~moistened by the attendant'
2375 1 | destroyed by the infiltrating littleness which gradually attained
2376 4 | three capes, and carried a~loaded stick, necessitated, he
2377 1 | great emergencies. Thus a loan should be put on the market
2378 8 | spoke last night in the lobby of the Opera-house~of the
2379 5 | financial and~political lobbyists where the opinions of the
2380 7 | sustained by private or local~interests. He finally proved
2381 3 | under-head-clerk. Living always in some locality~where rents are low, this
2382 5 | unfinished copy all in order, and locked them at once into the desk
2383 8 | this second and not less logical and important corollary:~
2384 1 | he~drives his tilbury to Longchamps and points with his whip
2385 8 | perhaps tell me that he longs to get~out of his place,--
2386 4 | just dined. Always on the lookout for a woman,--an~Englishwoman,
2387 3 | a timid, pale young man loom~up, cigarless, take notice
2388 8 | corollary:~The statesman first looms up in the sphere of higher
2389 3 | me clean~my teeth, which loosens them; presently you will
2390 1 | arena outside of which each lords it in his own way. Education,~
2391 4 | Mademoiselle Godard. Zelie Lorrain, a pupil,~in the first place,
2392 6 | and the Monarchy are~daily losing many of those who fought
2393 3 | have charge of the~public lotteries or reading-rooms. Some,
2394 2 | toothless, or puts into the lottery and steals~thirty sous a
2395 5 | request you to shout a little louder; you bring this office into
2396 Add | Middle Classes~ ~Thuillier, Louis-Jerome~The Middle Classes~ ~
2397 Add | Classes~ ~Louis XVIII., Louis-Stanislas-Xavier~The Chouans~The Seamy Side
2398 8 | all my time to myself to lounge the~streets or do amusing
2399 7 | I assure you he is quite lovable," she said, heartily.~ ~"
2400 7 | heart; we are partners, not lovers. If I show some~tenderness
2401 5 | part about himself, or he loves my wife."~ ~Such were the
2402 7 | he said to Rabourdin, lowering his~voice so as to be heard
2403 8 | from the highest to the lowest. This revolution~bore heaviest,
2404 3 | the painter, Dr. Bianchon, Lucien de~Rubempre, Octave de Camps,
2405 Add | Commission in Lunacy~ ~Rubempre, Lucien-Chardon de~Lost Illusions~A Distinguished
2406 4 | and the~Paste of Sultans, lucifer matches and portable gas,
2407 7 | the Arabian~Nights, the luckless man was fated to meet at
2408 2 | politics; dragged in~the lukewarm, fetched, carried, and buried
2409 5 | over his head that solid lump of foolishness,~that cube
2410 8 | escutcheon, with the motto "En Lupus in Historia," was able to~
2411 1 | just~sixteen, he left the Lycee Napoleon to enter as supernumerary
2412 8 | the sharp-~sightedness of lynxes, the perspicacity of account-books
2413 4 | letters signed "Comtesse de M--" or "Marquise~de B--";
2414 5 | Prince of Orange, the Guises,~Machiavelli, in short, all the best
2415 1 | she became in thought as Machiavellian~as Gondreville, and more
2416 1 | the secret springs of~her machinations. She carried into all her
2417 7 | possessed the whistle of the machinist at the~Opera. Her call,
2418 4 | feared them as others fear madmen, and watched~them with haggard
2419 1 | point can look at Venice, Madrid, Amsterdam, Stockholm, Rome;
2420 8 | his~feet, beautiful as the Magdalen.~ ~"My cup is full," cried
2421 1 | looking directly to the chief~magistrate of this nation, the clerks
2422 8 | the Academy--"~ ~Poiret [magnetized by the fixity of Bixiou'
2423 4 | Berlin), and if we could magnify and then picture the~teredos
2424 4 | richest, waited upon the main~body of the clerks. He was
2425 1 | with whom he had to do, he maintained the machine as it~then worked,
2426 4 | clear-sighted to~be deceived by any make-believe. Dutocq kept his place therefore~
2427 4 | forehead black, and that hat-~makers were in the habit of using
2428 2 | consultation on the secret maladies of power.~ ~After discovering
2429 4 | the sweating-sickness, a malady which prevails~in Champagne.
2430 4 | of the~Leuwenhoeks, the Malpighis, and the Raspails (an attempt
2431 5 | friend; I looked it out in~Malte-Brun: Goritz, in Latin Gorixia,
2432 4 | Though much admired by mammas this model young~man was
2433 2 | payment as requested, and~thus manages to obtain, as they said
2434 6 | forth. Good heavens! fancy managing a ministry with such men
2435 3 | young men,~such as Paul de Manerville and the Vicomte de Portenduere.
2436 7 | service ever since~he came to manhood, has married the daughter
2437 7 | amendments. All my batteries are manned.~If they threaten us with
2438 5 | with the Chamber. After manoeuvering his way to power in~the
2439 2 | from him what intrigue or manoeuvre he was to set~about. This
2440 4 | Baudoyer's bureau, but he manoeuvred to get himself~transferred
2441 1 | tyrannies, or diplomatic manoeuvrings fit to~terrify an ambassador,
2442 1 | path of DEBT. She set~up a manservant, and put him in livery of
2443 3 | certain sculptured marble mantel-pieces and ceilings, worthy~of
2444 3 | and without fire, on~the mantel-shelf of which stood a clock,
2445 4 | embroidered muslin~dresses, silk mantles, prunella boots, handsome
2446 2 | get the money?"~ ~"How did Manuel manage to become the owner
2447 1 | manufacture instead~of promoting manufactures? to possess property instead
2448 8 | Deputy [a manufacturer]. "The manufacturing interests of all~nations
2449 4 | Paris,~which he did with a map. He knew every inch of Arcueil,
2450 4 | invents the~subject and maps out the structure, or scenario,
2451 5 | he was wearied out with~marching and counter-marching, and
2452 4 | these pets of Monsieur le marechal~and Monsieur le duc? 'Thank
2453 2 | or wrote his name on the margin,--a signature which meant "
2454 2 | obtain; commissions have wide~margins for the deputies of the
2455 Add | Middle Classes~ ~Thuillier, Marie-Jeanne-Brigitte~The Middle Classes~ ~Thuillier,
2456 Add | of Business~ ~Chatelet, Marie-Louise-Anais de Negrepelisse, Baronne
2457 2 | can, but do~not say that Mariette danced badly. The devil!
2458 5 | cavalry, artillery, and marines of~the guard! You rave,
2459 4 | there! now-a-~days they only mark 'em when they come in late!"~ ~"
2460 1 | and there with strong red marks; a forehead and nose a la~
2461 3 | friendship I feel for you is marred by a~thought of self-interest?
2462 7 | have~become, through a good marriage-- Yes, that is all true,"
2463 1 | administrations to~admirals and marshals when both were employed
2464 1 | temperament~suffered, and was martyrized at heart by the scantiness
2465 8 | subtractions. These~sublime martyrs to figures have been known
2466 4 | s),--were a never-ending marvel to~Colleville. Raising the
2467 7 | l'Etourdi~played against Mascarille."~ ~"What can you mean?"~ ~"
2468 8 | second, purpure, three~mascles argent, two and one; third,
2469 4 | air of the~corridors, the masculine exhalations contained in
2470 4 | their fortune. Devoted to~masked balls during the carnival,
2471 8 | brothers Faucher, and the~massacres."~ ~Phellion. "He asserts
2472 2 | century to claim honor for the~masterpieces of the seventeenth. Flowers
2473 4 | temperament has a metal mat;~the lymphatic being who
2474 3 | Gigonnet approved of the match, for he had long employed
2475 4 | Paste of Sultans, lucifer matches and portable gas, jointed
2476 1 | 1830, the error of the materialism of the Restoration. To plant~
2477 4 | the bureau, and bought her materials on his~way back; then, while
2478 1 | probable future; to the maternal eyes a duke or~an ambassador,
2479 8 | From which we may deduce mathematically this corollary:~The statesman
2480 3 | clerkship, a distance which no mathematician, neither Archimedes, nor~
2481 1 | soldiers, artists, artisans, mathematicians, poets,~merchants, men who
2482 7 | moment; a woman caught in her matin mysteries would ever after~
2483 1 | of age, who had all the matrimonial claims of a dowry~of two
2484 4 | paper, and benches, but no mats~on which to wipe the public
2485 1 | in childhood is~becoming mature. Like Madame de Stael, who
2486 1 | Such were the thoughts maturing in Rabourdin's mind ever
2487 8 | formulate the whole matter in a maxim worthy of~Larochefoucault:
2488 1 | and more unprincipled than Maxime de Trailles. At such~times
2489 4 | Society of Prisons, one of~the mayors of Paris, etc."~ ~The person
2490 5 | Rabourdin was lost in a maze of conjecture without being
2491 3 | s widow, who~lives on a meagre pension and sacrifices herself
2492 6 | with the moral, and if you mean--"~ ~Dutocq. "I mean nothing."~ ~
2493 6 | consequences. Rabourdin would be a mean-spirited~creature to stay under Baudoyer;
2494 4 | and fitting them to new meanings. "Un Corse la~finira," found
2495 4 | kill that person. Dutocq~meanly courted Fleury because he
2496 | meanwhile
2497 5 | his motives. While justly measuring the folly of such~judgment,
2498 2 | plumb upon the best bit of meat in the middle of a kitchen.
2499 7 | of fifty-two farmers' and mechanics'~votes, which will be thrown
2500 1 | administration and~observe its mechanism, Rabourdin worked in the
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