Chapter
1 I | time until his son could take~a business which was sure
2 I | summoned home by his father to take the~helm of business, he
3 I | Sechard, "SABOTS? There, take the inventory and~let us
4 I | but their inventions won't~take in the provinces for another
5 I | empty market cart could~take it out on the return journey
6 I | days; he could afford to~take things easily; whereas . . .
7 I | restless mind was apt to take its stand on the~lower ground
8 II | disinterested enough to take her without a dowry. But
9 III | safely say nothing, and~take refuge in a mysterious shake
10 III | a benefactress who would take a mother's interest~in him;
11 III | it. She counseled him to take a~bold step and renounce
12 III | is master of his age may take all that he~needs, run any
13 III | on treacle,~but it would take a man like your father to
14 IV | which I am~in duty bound to take?~ ~"LOUISE DE NEGREPELISSE."~ ~
15 IV | pigeon-holed YOU, in fact. Take advantage of your social
16 IV | concern over seeming to take the~larger share. This one-sided
17 IV | Lucien's human~tendency to take himself as the centre of
18 IV | nervous. David advised him to~take Andre de Chenier and substitute
19 IV | together. It is fine;~shall we take a walk along the Charente?
20 IV | stupidity that can neither take in nor give~out any idea.
21 IV | time?"~ ~Or, "I am going to take a ride to-morrow; I am going
22 IV | taken care of him as you take care of a~cloak; she kept
23 IV | look, and~Francis seemed to take his ideas from Zizine's
24 V | whispered Zephirine, "take a glass of eau sucree."~ ~"
25 V | archangel given.~ ~Ah! be wary, take heed, lest aught should
26 V | shining seraph band, as they take the heavenward way;~ ~Too
27 V | ought to have made his son take them."~ ~"He is continuing
28 V | in the Song of~Songs."~ ~"Take that as your subject," said
29 V | times when we choose~to take the longest way, that the
30 V | nature. Social~claims will take up the whole of his time,
31 V | me a little, and I will take~courage to tell you the
32 V | who must have a~woman to take care of them."~ ~"Then you
33 V | quivering upon the river; let me take all this world about~us
34 V | for this purpose, it would~take a quarter of a century and
35 VI | of paper separately. They take it out of the mould, and~
36 VI | machinery; machinery must take the place of cheap Chinese~
37 VI | beginning, as you prefer to take it. Two creatures launch
38 VI | whither she was going. To take a walk alone with Lucien
39 VI | house whither she could take her beloved poet, after~
40 VI | silence~them? For whom do you take me? Am I not your Beatrice?
41 VII | ironical stress; he did not~take Bargeton seriously.~ ~"So
42 VII | women flocked~about her to take her into her bedroom. There
43 VIII| other steps that~I wish to take in Paris. You, my darling,
44 VIII| but your duty to hasten to take your place in~the succession
45 VIII| fortunes of men of letters? Take~the right road and reach
46 VIII| And now, when I ask you to take a~journey with me, you cannot
47 VIII| Lucien~that his mother might take the rooms and save David
48 VIII| sister in L'Houmeau and to take~counsel with her. As he
49 VIII| already. Come, I advise you to take two~thousand francs."~ ~
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