Chapter
1 I | his blind greed, the very nature of the man came~out in the
2 I | bargain-driver. David's nature was of the~sensitive and
3 I | preoccupation and finer nature he had not room for the
4 I | from the republican army. Nature had meant M. Chardon senior
5 I | physique was of the kind that Nature gives to the fighter, the~
6 I | of the dark; his was the~nature that sticks at no crime
7 I | well-balanced mind and timid nature at variance with a~strong
8 II | undiscovered ore in her nature, profited her~nothing, underwent
9 III | the real quality of his~nature discerned through the incognito.
10 III | in the worst of Lucien's nature,~and spread corruption in
11 III | trifles, David~lacked, while Nature had bestowed them upon his
12 IV | this goodness of a noble nature increased Lucien's human~
13 V | which~was hers by right of nature. Judge, therefore, how unpleasantly
14 V | those~women whose great nature lends stateliness to the
15 V | the scent of the~earth. Nature speaks for them."~ ~"And
16 V | not like toil; it is his nature. Social~claims will take
17 V | Lucien, his enthusiastic nature would spoil everything;
18 VI | little by little, even as Nature herself~proceeds. Perhaps
19 VI | discovered David's real nature, in fact. His facile~character
20 VI | pleasure with the selfish good-~nature that flings alms to a beggar,
21 VII | here and there guessed the nature of~the conference, and the
22 VIII| keenly painful to a generous nature than a failure to keep such~
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