Chapter
1 Dedication| your sincere admirer and friend,~DE BALZAC.~ ~ ~
2 I | follows robbery. Our worthy friend intended to pay himself~
3 I | came across an old school friend in the~direst poverty. Lucien
4 I | Sechard left, his future friend was in the third form.~ ~
5 I | David. David admired his friend, while he kept him out~of
6 I | give way. He felt that his friend's~physical beauty implied
7 I | in him. David~noticed his friend's embarrassed flush, and
8 I | Sechard, my brother, my friend. I shall find an answer
9 II | presence of mind~of a lady friend who put burglars to flight
10 III | declared~himself Lucien's friend. The great diplomatist,
11 III | and declared himself his~friend! To launch the poet into
12 III | the difficulties from her~friend, but she let fall a few
13 III | was done solely for his friend David's sake.~ ~He wrote
14 III | the future, and a father,~friend, and brother to him in the
15 III | had bestowed them upon his friend. Of gentle~blood on the
16 IV | Here is the letter:--~ ~"MY FRIEND,--Why should I refuse to
17 IV | antique manner. But, dear friend, you would not,~of course,
18 IV | should like to see your friend,~and know and decide for
19 IV | twice tenderly towards this friend, who by the~way of friendship
20 IV | heart go out towards his friend.~ ~It was one of those moments
21 IV | him, David~was his devoted friend; he was accustomed to see
22 IV | much at ease, greeted his friend~Bargeton, and favored Lucien
23 IV | together, each with his~friend's wife on his arm, a cross-cornered
24 IV | otherwise~Francis, the friend of the house.~ ~Madame de
25 IV | love.~ ~Francis, the house friend, was rather distinguished-looking.
26 V | own. "Endure your woes, my~friend, you will be great one day;
27 V | Then you are only a false friend to him!" Eve cried in despair, "
28 VI | poet; "but as you are our friend, I can tell~you about it;
29 VII | well, I am too much your friend to leave you in ignorance.
30 VIII | less to be feared than his friend's~unlucky instability of
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