Chapter
1 I | above daily life, to put men continually in mind of the~
2 I | to the service. ~Even the men in the ranks were delighted,
3 I | seems," said one of the men.~ ~The General had left
4 I | persistent efforts made by men~who brought great influence
5 II | the space between~kneeling men, and a God hidden by the
6 III | the Faubourg. There are men and women born far~enough
7 III | risen,~it has been to bring men, affairs, and principles
8 IV | life~and elevation into men's ideas of religion, and
9 IV | searched their Houses for men of the stamp that~Napoleon
10 IV | have absorbed the energetic men among the bourgeoisie, and~
11 IV | the market-place. Young men, shut out from office, were~
12 IV | loftier and clearer-sighted men who set~their faces against
13 IV | self-interest. A few~famous men of letters, a few oratorical
14 IV | disinterested persons, the men whose loftiness of view
15 IV | and~spirited policy--these men, to repeat, were taken out
16 IV | fashion. She could laugh at men at~her ease, play with fire,
17 IV | filled up by~the old worn-out men, who kept them in leading
18 V | other than corrupted by men.~ ~There came a moment when
19 V | as before. Two or three men were~completely deceived,
20 V | body of highly~educated men who were apt to think for
21 V | invariably the most remarkable men in their department,~because
22 V | twenty into the whirlwind of men~directed by Napoleon; his
23 V | done his duty. Like all shy men, he was habitually silent;
24 VI | Montriveau was one of~many great men unknown to fame, and philosophical
25 VI | he was~not very popular. Men may indeed allow you to
26 VI | acquaintances, among the principal~men of science in Paris, and
27 VI | some few well-read military men. ~The incidents of his slavery
28 VI | trying to attach capable men to itself and to~strengthen
29 VI | circumvent the strongest men and corrode the steel temper.
30 VI | and his life; but for~the men who cried him up behind
31 VI | the guide and the older men of the place, he started
32 VI | like all really strong men,~he was mild of speech,
33 VI | her. Women envied her, and~men fell in love with her, not
34 VI | again among the groups of men gathered at a distance from
35 VI | of feeling.~ ~There are men here and there as much engrossed
36 VI | to my thinking, from you men it is the most respectful
37 VI | and, for the many young men who carry a~redundance of
38 VII | convert me is a lie that men make for~themselves; hope
39 VII | retard destiny, so far as men are concerned, at my~fancy,
40 VII | for the use of military men. Montriveau chafed; his
41 VII | the~very soil of France. Men die, but people's interests
42 VII | was young; the time when~men and women feel that they
43 VII | passion in some of you; other men ask for an untiring~devotion,
44 VIII| fear~nothing from God or men."~ ~"What good would the
45 VIII| himself as he was, as all men are under the~influence
46 VIII| man, who rose above other men, whose character~frightened
47 VIII| fashion to all the young men in Paris. As a man of~gallantry,
48 VIII| friendship between~the two men knew no bounds, and that
49 VIII| infuriate the coolest of men? There was a sort of~untrammelled
50 VIII| was attacked by~several men, who rapidly flung a handkerchief
51 VIII| have boundless~power over men: but remember that once
52 VIII| bear it any longer. Other~men will tell you that you have
53 IX | ill of you. ~Why are those men there? What are you going
54 IX | going to do to me?"~ ~"Those men will be as silent as I myself
55 IX | accompanied by high rank, as men count it. Oh, my Armand,
56 IX | what, moreover,~were these men compared with him whom she
57 IX | conditions which poets and men~of the world, philosophers
58 IX | dies out when hope is dead. Men and women may pass through
59 IX | such tremendous natures. Men of that stamp are all~very
60 IX | always been for commonplace~men; her lover at the moment,
61 IX | makes a mistake which few men can~forgive; almost every
62 IX | down from heaven to reach men; and I wish to~be an angel
63 IX | forever. Only women or young men can~imagine the dull, frenzied
64 IX | Duchess's eyes. As for~older men, if during the paroxysms
65 IX | report was confirmed; the men one and all believed it,
66 IX | virtue; while excited~young men rushed about on horseback
67 IX | Blamont-Chauvry.~ ~Young men who wished to stand well
68 IX | well at Court, ambitious men, and~young married women
69 IX | de Grandlieu. Both were men of fifty-six or thereabouts,
70 IX | somewhat~florid-complexioned men with jaded eyes, and lower
71 IX | them on their guard with men whom they~feared, vapid
72 IX | and the repugnance felt by men of~ability for bartering
73 IX | but one of Buonaparte's men could~ask such an indecorous
74 IX | he is one of the great men of the day; he is~high up
75 IX | Little boys grow up into men, and~men are ungrateful
76 IX | boys grow up into men, and~men are ungrateful beings. When
77 X | arrange matters suitably. You men~understand nothing; you
78 X | not at the form. ~But the men and women of those times,
79 X | called,~never a one of your men in yellow kid gloves and
80 X | show their devotion for men. These modern~gentlemen
81 X | hands, and ask him, as you men can ask~things between yourselves--
82 X | presence. Certain feelings men hide from~each other. I
83 X | to protect and watch~over men in His name. You have but
84 X | of an electric shock on men and women alike.~ ~"Is it
85 X | made a~blunder, of which men of your energy are very
86 X | by several~distinguished men, most of them Frenchmen,
87 X | Montriveau's companions took the men ashore in the~ship's longboat,
88 X | treasure-seekers, a gang of men whose hobby was~well known
89 X | among~the reefs, or the men at work among the rocks;
90 X | ingenuity worthy of~these men who found nothing impossible,
91 X | But is there not, for men of vigorous character, something~
92 X | interesting of all beauty to those men who feel that within them~
93 X | magnificent utterance which all men respect.~ ~That night eleven
94 X | presented no difficulties to men~who combined boldness and
95 X | the~knowledge peculiar to men of the world, especially
96 X | were sawn through. Three men stood on~guard outside,
97 X | struck three just as the two men reached the dormitory~cells.
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