Chapter
1 I | his clothes than you could think~of a bulb without its husk.
2 III | his first impulse and to think twice~before yielding to
3 III | curtly. He was beginning to~think his father's apprentice
4 III | come too late, Eve might think him a~nuisance; she would
5 IV | us now."~ ~"How can you think that, if you know me?"~ ~
6 IV | can be blinded. Will~you think the worse of me if I attach
7 IV | of friendship had come to think the very thoughts that he,
8 IV | everything that he~could think of put him in some false
9 IV | ceiling and vainly tried to think of something~else to say.
10 IV | life might be tempted to think that such persons are purely~
11 V | Don't ask me what I think, dear; I cannot keep my
12 V | influence.~ ~"What do you think of our poet and his poetry?"
13 V | while what life might be; think of~the piercing eyes that
14 V | the days of~old; I like to think that I see a fragment of
15 V | I owe you an~evening, I think, when you have given up
16 V | it~makes me tremble to think that this great lady may
17 V | drudgery. It makes me happy to think~that I toil so much, if
18 V | up all our fortune, and~think and feel and hope in him."~ ~"
19 V | has given to me! I do~not think that Lucien can be as happy
20 VI | reed; naturally I began to think of the reeds that~grow here
21 VI | Really, anybody~might think that the house that has
22 VI | de Bargeton, and began to think of the luxuries~which he
23 VI | gathered together.~ ~"Do not think of calling Nais to account
24 VI | is~ridiculous. Just look! Think of a druggist's son giving
25 VI | partisans. "What do you~yourself think?" they asked, each of his
26 VI | head,~that he could not think, could not write a line.
27 VII | said M. du Chatelet, "I think that M. de Rubempre's~position
28 VII | away before I~had time to think; we were out in Beaulieu
29 VII | the lady.~ ~"What do you think of doing?"~ ~"I shall see."~ ~
30 VII | wife is pure; but if you think, you will see~that it is
31 VII | confidence leads them to think a good deal over~the remarks
32 VIII| you bear me. Do you not think that it would be best to
33 VIII| ought to do as she wishes, I think; she knows better than we
34 VIII| journey with me, you cannot think of giving up a wedding dinner
35 VIII| wedding jewelry, I did not think that I should be sorry I
36 VIII| mother-in-law.~ ~"Oh! why do you think so much for me?" protested
37 VIII| pause, then he said,~"Do not think hardly of me, my dear, good
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