Chapter
1 Dedication| been journalists in the time of~Moliere, who can doubt
2 I | I~At the time when this story opens, the
3 I | Sechard had been in his time a journeyman pressman, a "
4 I | of theory. In course of time he had~learned to estimate
5 I | the paper. So from this time forward he was his own landlord,
6 I | been a printing office from time~immemorial.~ ~He had every
7 I | harshly so as to prolong the time of parental rule,~making
8 I | thought to tide over the time until his son could take~
9 I | his education at~the same time, and Didot's foreman became
10 I | septuagenarian sighed for the time when he could live at ease
11 I | present purposes for a long time past. The~ground floor consisted
12 I | into the attic until such time as an empty market cart
13 I | brow? Now surely~was the time when the education would
14 I | After all, if I have a rough time~of it, so had the old man;
15 I | quite of that opinion by the~time that he had reached his
16 I | Chronicle. But, at the~same time, David must pledge himself
17 I | guillotine in 1793. He had gained time by declaring~that she was
18 I | printer's reader came in time; David had~no need whatever
19 I | he cried for the third time, when David~surrendered
20 II | attempt about this very time to extend the town~towards
21 II | beforehand elsewhere. For some time past the suburb of L'Houmeau~
22 II | family or other, and in due time he would~have been a duke
23 II | great composers.~Finally, as time hung heavy on his hands
24 II | father-in-law.~ ~By this time Mme. de Bargeton was thirty-six
25 II | in Angouleme until such time as~Mme. de Bargeton's inheritance
26 II | transforming operation of Time and changed to~absurdities.
27 II | the heroes of a modern~time who outdid the mythical
28 II | in France for the first time between~1815 and 1821, the
29 III | tribes. At length, about the time~that Montriveau reached
30 III | s department~until such time as a controllership should
31 III | the country, mellowed by time. It looked dismal~enough
32 III | thought them very kind for a time,~and later found out the
33 III | appeared for the first time in~the faded great drawing-room,
34 III | ruining Lucien.~ ~From this time forward, vague rumors reported
35 III | Louise's forehead, he had had time to measure the distance
36 III | heart. So, since the first time that these two had~met,
37 III | saw once a year at~vintage time when his father walked him
38 III | would be in bed by this time no doubt; and so he turned~
39 III | foundations of rock. Many a time~Eve had seen revelations
40 IV | Bargeton's, we can spend the time together. It is fine;~shall
41 IV | by love.~ ~"But give me time to dress!" she said, as
42 IV | you have some~at the same time?"~ ~Or, "I am going to take
43 IV | was some talk about this time of nominating the mute gentleman~
44 IV | begarlanded console table of the time of~ ~Louis Quinze; then,
45 IV | day. Now was the~proper time to bring it out.~ ~"Well,
46 IV | at a~distance.~ ~By this time the guests began to arrive.
47 IV | could behold for the first time with~gravity.~ ~Stanislas
48 IV | but he spent the whole time in his study on puerilities,
49 V | Lucien to continue, and this time~he caught the attention
50 V | dreaming; for the~first time in her life she had been
51 V | notions, he left the rest to~time. His lordship was sure to
52 V | you should never find time heavy on your~hands."~ ~"
53 V | glance round the circle; "the time of gestation is~long----"~ ~"
54 V | John in Patmos; but by this time the card-tables had claimed
55 V | chivalrous ditty made in the time of the Empire. Duets~followed,
56 V | late in the day. By the time that he reached the Bordeaux~
57 V | take up the whole of his time, and for a man who has~nothing
58 V | nothing but his brains, time is capital. He likes to
59 V | expressing for the first~time a woman's sweet anxiety
60 V | of the family for a long~time, weighs so heavily upon
61 V | years we may have~a hard time of it; but I shall find
62 V | in itself during the long time~of experiment, and the desire
63 V | seeing it for the first time in all its splendor,~lighted
64 V | the eagle of Napoleon's time gave the name to the~"double-eagle"
65 VI | the crying needs of the time. And~for this reason: although
66 VI | destroyed.~ ~"There is a time coming when legislation
67 VI | unobtainable in ten years' time. Well, your brother told
68 VI | he;~"it has been a cruel time for me."~ ~"Poor Lucien!
69 VI | never give me up."~ ~"It is time that life was made smooth
70 VI | out on the road at this~time of day? There is your way
71 VI | come~just in the nick of time to pay the cooper. If it
72 VI | but he recollected just in time that he had declined to
73 VI | which he enjoyed for the time being as the rightful accessories
74 VI | as might be.~ ~It was a time of blithe and unmixed happiness
75 VI | he had dreams of a great time to~come, and built the fabric
76 VI | troubled with indigestion from time to time,~ ~cherished the
77 VI | indigestion from time to time,~ ~cherished the happy delusion
78 VI | wedding, for it took some time to paper and paint their~
79 VI | empty space; and,~having time for reflection, come to
80 VI | plane, while, at the same time, the very obstacles placed~
81 VI | carried away for the first time by passion, Louise~discovered
82 VI | constancy which should give her time to judge her lover.~ ~Lucien
83 VI | sow regrets in the present time, so sweet as it is, to poison~
84 VII | little to the tale every time~that he told it. Every one
85 VII | that evening, for~by that time the most exaggerated versions
86 VII | hurried me away before I~had time to think; we were out in
87 VII | prove~my love for you at any time and in any way. Yes, I will
88 VII | what a visit meant at this time of night, when old M. de~
89 VIII | glance; but at the same time he seemed~to regard the
90 VIII | shut up~my house for some time; for there will be people
91 VIII | wait in Paris until the time comes when I can spend~my
92 VIII | Royalist poet at the same time. Not only is it the right
93 VIII | him, though at the same time she made him feel~that he
94 VIII | year. And in six~months' time I shall have plenty of money."~ ~
95 VIII | carriage, which he had many a time seen in the coach-house,
|