Chapter
1 I | but one son. The~boy he sent to the grammar school; he
2 I | book learning; and when~he sent his son to Paris to study
3 I | them all back again if~you sent them out with a plain M
4 I | Not seldom his anxieties sent him hurrying from Marsac
5 I | The news of this proposal sent by David to his father brought
6 I | author. "Mme. de Bargeton~sent me here."~ ~Lucien flushed
7 II | advantages, and neighboring towns sent their daughters to~its boarding
8 III | cathedral, he played the organ, sent those who knew no better
9 III | fragments of Beethoven till she sent him into ecstasy; and, happy
10 V | but one, bright messenger sent from the skies~Whom earth
11 V | kindling glow~Of virtue sent from God, did I know the
12 V | sign,~Nor read the token sent on a white and dazzling
13 V | about her."~ ~"You have sent a chill of dread through
14 VI | Establishment, was umpire, and he~sent the two readers to M. l'
15 VI | they~repay you for it. I sent you to school; I spent any
16 VI | make a scholar of you; I sent you to the Didots to learn
17 VI | could have got rid of him, sent him out of the~house, or
18 VIII| scornfully. "This morning I~sent my husband out to fight
19 VIII| the parcel~until Lucien sent for it.~ ~In spite of Mme.
20 VIII| alone or with Lucien, he sent his man to Ruffec with~instructions
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