Chapter
1 I | learned to read or write. Just then, however, a~Representative
2 I | homely old-world room; it was just as~he had left it.~ ~The
3 I | plant out of account. It~was just possible, he thought, to
4 I | always~in his vineyard now, just as, in the old days, he
5 I | traces in her beautiful face, just as the slow decline of a
6 I | serves as a stepping-stone. Just now~these tendencies of
7 I | do you know what I have just received from~Paris?" He
8 I | escape from evil fortune!"~ ~Just at that moment the low glass
9 II | which terminates abruptly just above the road from~Paris
10 II | feeble intellect; but he had just the exact amount of~commonsense
11 III | thick~of a European crisis. Just as he had been promised
12 III | to find an English~vessel just about to set sail, and so
13 III | Lucien's room was an~attic just under the roof.~ ~"Good-day,
14 III | pretty middling? I have just been experimenting on treacle,~
15 IV | were a mouse, and could just slip in and see it!~Come,
16 IV | closet, where there was just room for a narrow bed, an
17 IV | not the wealth of a Keller just yet, nor the name of a~Desplein,
18 IV | The thing that you have just done for me, when you risked~
19 IV | Or, very likely--~ ~"I am just about to ring for a glass
20 IV | black coat. He was indeed just the faded beau who~might
21 IV | In their dress there was just that tinge~of pretension
22 V | East, but the darkness is just~as thick as before."~ ~"
23 V | that we live."~ ~"You have just expressed the very thing
24 V | for the stuff that~he has just been reading to us is a
25 V | prelate. His Vicar-General had~just been explaining the profound
26 V | child, M. de Rubempre is just about to recite his Saint
27 V | answered candidly.~ ~"Then, just now I am not so beautiful?"
28 V | Eve. After all that I have just said, I~hope that you will
29 V | shield, or the flower-pot, just~as at a later day, the eagle
30 VI | and our~books to be cheap, just as people are beginning
31 VI | fortune. But he was living just now in a golden dream; he
32 VI | about it; my mother has just given her consent to my
33 VI | by the side of the croft just as the sun~rose, and caught
34 VI | but I am not very well off just now."~ ~"They all tell me
35 VI | except to muddle your~wits? Just you listen: these gentlemen
36 VI | altogether; the money will come~just in the nick of time to pay
37 VI | Well, how much has~she?"~ ~"Just as much as my mother had."~ ~
38 VI | francs!" but he recollected just in time that he had declined
39 VI | intelligence," said David.~ ~"You just go into the market and see
40 VI | that she is~ridiculous. Just look! Think of a druggist'
41 VI | than a woman."~ ~"That is just what you might say to a
42 VII | VII~Just at that moment Stanislas
43 VII | enough for them.~ ~"Who came just now?" she asked the servants.~ ~"
44 VII | boudoir.~ ~"If they saw you just now, I am lost," she told
45 VII | glance down on him.~ ~"Do just tell us how it really was,"
46 VII | Stanislas happened to come in just as I~told the boy to get
47 VIII| Bargeton looked as if he had just come out for a walk. He
48 VIII| house-surgeon at the~hospital has just said that M. de Chandour
49 VIII| he must leave the rooms~just furnished for him at such
50 VIII| three of your white ties~are just common muslin, there are
51 VIII| much more. Then you have just the one pair of new~nankeen
52 VIII| Mamma, dear," said David, "just tell M. Postel that I will
53 VIII| Love, you were saying just now that he would want two
54 VIII| taken all my capital; I have just two thousand francs~left,
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