Chapter
1 II | shopkeeper of the upper town will tell you, speaking~of a merchant
2 III | mistress' pencil steals~To tell the secret gladness that
3 III | five months, and he did~not tell himself that David could
4 IV | silence. If he wished to~tell her about it, she could
5 IV | how could she ask~him to tell her? She waited. Here is
6 IV | for you, everything would tell against me. You were born
7 IV | uneasy since," he would tell~you. "I knew how it would
8 IV | grasp anything that you tell her in a moment.~Did she
9 V | of poison flowers. Then tell in your song of~plants that
10 V | of the Charente, let me tell you about my anxiety as
11 V | how to speak of~them. Only tell me that you care for me
12 V | and I will take~courage to tell you the rest."~ ~"Indeed,"
13 V | confidence for~confidence, I will tell you this, that I have never
14 V | serious earnest. I ought to tell you about my~faults, for
15 VI | thoughts, and began at once to tell Lucien about his own~plans.~ ~
16 VI | The three began at once to tell the astonished mother all
17 VI | you are our friend, I can tell~you about it; my mother
18 VI | off just now."~ ~"They all tell me that I ought not to put
19 VI | Come, you have something to~tell me, have you not? You came
20 VII | the affair, went first to tell the great news at the club,~
21 VII | down on him.~ ~"Do just tell us how it really was," they
22 VII | of his love. I need~not tell you that your wife is pure;
23 VII | My father often used to tell me of Bargeton's exploits."~ ~"
24 VIII| rest of his days. I came to tell you how it ended, lest you
25 VIII| light in a little town; tell me, if you can, the name
26 VIII| hurried down~at once to tell the news to his sister in
27 VIII| dear," said David, "just tell M. Postel that I will put
28 VIII| name to the bill, for I can tell from your face, Lucien,
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