Chapter
1 III| offspring. And~indeed, for people accustomed to a stately
2 III| is always accepted~by the people; its "reasons of state"
3 III| melodies are taken over by the people; clearness~of thought, the
4 III| once by the populace. The people always wish to~see money,
5 IV | and here in France the people are undoubtedly the~sovereigns
6 IV | hands moving? How lead a people~without the power of command?
7 IV | insignia which offended the people,~and quietly grasping the
8 IV | to see so many fortunate people above~him. He is very far
9 IV | intrinsic merit in all these people, but the merit~was on the
10 IV | but the maxim that~the people must be made to WILL everything,
11 IV | middle classes in days when~people's heads were turned with
12 IV | nation at any time there is a people apart thus~constituted,
13 VI | power to do and feel.~ ~People were afraid of Montriveau;
14 VI | thought to be haughtiness,~and people were greatly taken with
15 VI | Let us regard appearances. People must not talk~about us.
16 VI | certain to be seen, till people jokingly called~him "Her
17 VI | rule. The anecdotes which people were pleased to circulate~
18 VI | amused herself with other~people's secrets, and kept her
19 VI | something? What will not people say~of a woman to whom no
20 VII| the~sacrament at Easter? People must certainly do something
21 VII| ideologists. If you want to keep people from reasoning, you must~
22 VII| interests of all honest people~personified. There, my friend,
23 VII| society would be overturned if people were always calling its~
24 VII| gained an ascendancy over~people's minds. If you have no
25 VII| of France. Men die, but people's interests do not die.~. . .
26 VII| little more~geometry than people are wont to think.~ ~Now
27 IX | diamonds, and so avoiding~people's questions. In short, you
28 IX | unbearably~hot in the rooms."~ ~"People thought that you had gone;
29 IX | He knows how to~love!' People are always telling me that
30 IX | to their palaces, several people~had recognised the Duchess'
31 IX | taken as final decrees. People came to~consult her on questions
32 IX | held his head~high; to many people this would have given an
33 IX | public with, `These are our people,' could only be a~black-hearted
34 X | which do not touch ordinary people. Can you wish to~give an
35 X | return for~our kindness. The people are not in a position to
36 X | are locked up (but locking people up is out of fashion now),
37 X | you to kiss my bones. Old people~have a courtesy of their
38 X | to protect her. "But the people passing~in the street,"
39 X | If~fishing vessels or the people on the island caught sight
40 X | treasure from Mexico. The people at the inn and the~authorities
41 X | an essentially~imitative people, were the first to take
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