Chapter
1 I | precipices, in every~place man has sought for the poetry
2 I | Silence; in every place man has striven to draw closer
3 I | cliff's edge; and everywhere man has found God. ~But nowhere,
4 I | certainly a delicate one; but a man of passionate temper, whose~
5 I | series of poems in action, a~man who all his life long had
6 I | instead of writing~them, a man pre-eminently a Doer, was
7 I | of all the~crimes which a man in favour with the Commander-in-Chief
8 I | thrilling drama that ever set a man's heart beating~opened out
9 I | enthusiasm,~that not a single man regretted that he had come
10 II | furthermore, let the seeker be a man of ardent temper, with a~
11 II | leonine head and mane, a man to inspire awe~and fear
12 II | felt glad to be the only man there. He tramped~noisily
13 II | wellnigh overcame a strong man's~heart? Had she so fully
14 II | the air--the air~that a man would fain breathe more
15 II | piety in a French~military man, the worthy magistrate invited
16 II | is equally stringent. No man may enter a convent of Barefoot~
17 II | reckon years now," the good man answered, with a~simplicity
18 II | scarcely comprehensible. A man seems~confessed a weakling
19 II | of work; he is evading a man's destiny in his cell. ~
20 II | destiny in his cell. ~But what man's strength, blended with
21 II | choice of the convent life! A man may have~any number of motives
22 II | solemn, something more than a man~had a right to look for
23 II | barrier! Try to imagine the man saying within~himself, "
24 II | name softly spoken by the man who had been so hard in~
25 II | love and regret,~that a man less strongly constituted
26 III | I have lied~to you; this man is my lover!"~ ~The curtain
27 IV | of landed estates (a rich man before he was born)~lives
28 IV | form a lofty spirit in a man,~possessed of such privileges
29 IV | power of the captain in the man who wields it?~ ~The Faubourg
30 IV | patron's place, like a great man, the~Faubourg Saint-Germain
31 IV | different systems, as any man may~see for himself if he
32 IV | de Talleyrand was the one man~among them with the steel-encompassed
33 IV | before~the lampoons of a man who made it a boast that
34 IV | gives~back life to a dying man; and the Faubourg Saint-Germain
35 IV | always going on.~ ~If a man is indolent, the indolence
36 IV | nature of~things that the man should be identified with
37 IV | shine in any epoch unless~a man represents the ideas of
38 V | some way she satisfied a man's ambitions. A~lover constantly
39 V | stranger. Something in~the man's large gravity of aspect
40 VI | to Paris in 1818 a ruined man. He had no~interest, and
41 VI | year. He had been a poor man, he was now rich; or, externally
42 VI | everything passed within the man, there~were no external
43 VI | that her~interest in the man before her had been aroused
44 VI | on for two hours."~ ~"The man is right," thought M. de
45 VI | tie between the condemned man and the headsman. ~But the
46 VI | back a cool glance like a~man that knows his power, left
47 VI | her life? And never was a man's exterior a better exponent
48 VI | must disappear, and the man would show~himself implacable,
49 VI | could not fail to flatter a~man of more than ordinary powers,
50 VI | powers, for the fact that a man rises~above the ordinary
51 VI | earliest manhood.~ ~Is there a man in any rank of life that
52 VI | true that for everyone, man or~woman, there is a wealth
53 VI | never suffer through~her? A man makes these reflections
54 VI | enough to~move the coldest man's heart?~ ~This, therefore,
55 VI | seldom confess to it.~ ~Every man in Paris is supposed to
56 VI | suppressed turbulence.~ ~A strong man, and violent as he was strong,
57 VI | contract made with Destiny a man's whole future is solemnly~
58 VI | the one end.~ ~A younger man would have said to himself, "
59 VI | de Langeais cared for a man, he would be a very lucky
60 VI | for my~mistress." And if a man takes such an idea into
61 VI | that he had known. When a~man has kept all his boyish
62 VI | swiftest revolutions in a man's outward life only touch
63 VI | successful. The General,~poor man, was really distressed by
64 VI | the vapours. How could a man~dare to speak just then
65 VI | have never loved. It is a man's great pretension with
66 VI | ourselves? Where is the man that~has found but a single
67 VI | this unmistakably great man promised her amusement,
68 VI | to see that this strong man had told her the truth. ~
69 VI | magnificent worth of the man, it would~have been grievous
70 VI | visitors, monsieur," said the man;~"she is dressing, she begs
71 VI | bring into her voice for the man whom she wishes to~please.~ ~"
72 VI | lips to the soul. And if a man~is attracted to a woman,
73 VI | admiration, how to raise a man in~his own esteem as he
74 VI | voyageur, that if I accept a man's arm, he is~forthwith above
75 VI | love to share in a brave~man's hardships, and I feel
76 VI | There was not a happier man in the world than Armand
77 VI | M. de Montriveau is the man for whom the Duchess~shows
78 VI | She persisted.~ ~"When a man idolises you, how can he
79 VI | with a single example of a~man that realises all that our
80 VI | always the~cause of the man's desertion. If you had
81 VI | say~of a woman to whom no man attaches himself? Oh, she
82 VII | would have been a banished man~forever, accused and convicted
83 VII | was there in the strong man in~love.~ ~"If all you want
84 VII | world. I am young, Armand; a man with no delicacy might tempt
85 VII | policy, to keep her hold on a man whose ardent~passion gave
86 VII | impossible to believe in~man. Hush, do not talk like
87 VII | of this suitor, for the man's persistence~was beginning
88 VII | control the happiness of a man of~Montriveau's temper,
89 VII | talk about our love to that man?"~ ~"He is my confessor."~ ~"
90 VII | confessional?"~ ~"Does that man know all about our quarrels
91 VII | my love for~you?"~ ~"That man, monsieur; say God!"~ ~"
92 VII | was at the piano. If the man~of science or the poet can
93 VII | executant. For the poet~and the man of science there is a music
94 VII | an unguessed pain, some man whose soul vibrates~with
95 VII | as a~woman looks at the man she loves, "nor do you know,
96 VII | must be believed that no man had touched her heart, or~
97 VII | most delicate proofs of~a man's love during seven months,
98 VII | guess~his desire. When was a man's desire a secret? And have
99 VII | intolerable.~ ~What indeed can a man say when a woman will not
100 VII | it. But you must pardon a man of spirit if he feels~humiliated
101 VII | invented some nobler way for a man to confirm the gift of his~
102 VII | ourselves body and soul, but a~man is bound to nothing by accepting
103 VII | really~read the riddle of man's heart."~
104 VIII| me through fear? And if a man knows that he must~risk
105 VIII| that she~was adored by this man, who rose above other men,
106 VIII| hand, the little hand of a man whose~greatness she could
107 VIII| say to herself--~ ~"This man is capable of killing me
108 VIII| with~the impartiality of a man who is conscious of all
109 VIII| life is at the full! ~The man that is strong enough to
110 VIII| companion~chanced to be a man for whom he felt a kind
111 VIII| young men in Paris. As a man of~gallantry, his success
112 VIII| would have cost any other man his life. But from their~
113 VIII| Duchess? Between~ourselves a man of my stamp ought first
114 VIII| game of chess. And if a man knows the game, let him
115 VIII| among~mortals, while a great man at such a time possesses
116 VIII| by complete composure. No man~is strong enough to bear
117 VIII| She has played~with many a man, no doubt; I will avenge
118 VIII| first time, it may be, in a man's heart, revenge and love~
119 VIII| touch of the implacable man's~strong hand in her hair;
120 VIII| Would~that bull-necked man dash out her vitals by flinging
121 VIII| indifferent to her? And has not a man~gained ground immensely
122 VIII| did not~hate him.~ ~The man and woman thus singularly
123 VIII| giving~a hand to a young man who came up at that moment.~ ~
124 VIII| was the~remark which the man makes at Westminster when
125 VIII| shown the~axe with which a man in a mask cut off Charles
126 VIII| of him."~ ~"What does the man say?" asked Mme de Serizy.~ ~" `
127 VIII| it is for the sake of a man~who cannot make allowances
128 VIII| like a monk's cell. The man's character and thoughts~
129 VIII| humiliation. She was in this man's power;~and he would not
130 VIII| she cannot share; and if a man loves and cannot win love
131 VIII| have masses~said for such a man's soul. You both belong
132 VIII| brother the convict to take a man's life;~you have taken more,
133 VIII| have taken the joy out of a man's life,~you have killed
134 VIII| holding out~a hand to the man who did not take it; "you
135 VIII| I_ punish you, madame! A man must love still, to punish,
136 IX | express to~give happiness to a man so violently tried by adversity.
137 IX | master should be a great man. As I felt~conscious of
138 IX | life, and know how easily a man~snaps such ties? The bourgeoises,
139 IX | across your coachman, the man is as~tipsy as all the Swiss
140 IX | all her~heart; with the man grown great by all that
141 IX | her, there was now~but one man in the world; which is to
142 IX | She had said to this man, "I love you; I am yours!"
143 IX | Aiglemont, was a~fine, tall man.~ ~After this, the Countess
144 IX | woman's appointed lot; a man's is the active~part, a
145 IX | can~forgive; almost every man would feel that a woman
146 IX | but I~will hold it out. A man of a thousand will see a
147 IX | indifferently~as she could, when the man came back to report himself.~ ~"
148 IX | savage of a Montriveau is a man of bronze," said they;~"
149 IX | was a big, tall, and spare man, a seigneur of the old~school,
150 IX | son Marigny is an amiable man; he has a sharp wit,~he
151 IX | him there. He was a big~man with an incredible passion
152 IX | ambition. He is just the man to say, `Here is my commission,~
153 IX | him for a long while. The man that pointed~out the Court
154 IX | for the elder; this fat man with the~little mind is
155 IX | passion, my dear niece; a man does not leave a~woman while
156 IX | about the~Revolution. When a man cannot lay the blame on
157 IX | love of this lucky young man."~
158 X | The~Vidame is right. No man is worth a single one of
159 X | heart; my aunt is right; a man~cannot surely refuse a pretty
160 X | bribed M.~de Montriveau's man, Auguste. And so at eight
161 X | Had he two houses? The man would give no~answer. Mme
162 X | of the room, but not~the man's whole loyalty.~ ~When
163 X | took her~resolution. Her man of business came for an
164 X | a code of honour between~man and man which you do not
165 X | of honour between~man and man which you do not use with
166 X | perhaps will be the last man to set eyes on the Duchesse
167 X | then I give up~all hope. A man never recovers from those
168 X | shall never look on another man's face; and may~the glory
169 X | forever my husband, the one man in the world for me;~then
170 X | justice to this extraordinary man, it~must be said that his
171 X | ascent in the~darkness. Each man carried a poniard, a provision
172 X | Marsay,~the most dexterous man among them, disguised by
173 X | passions; but~as for love, a man ought to know how to place
174 X | love that can satisfy a man's first love."~
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