Chapter
1 I | conversation~with the country gentleman, the author of a monograph
2 II | compositions. The old country~gentleman's hospitality was handsomely
3 II | mind.~A noble or a country gentleman was the man for him, somebody
4 III| Chatelet," and left that gentleman thunderstruck by the discovery
5 IV | world and the manners of a gentleman. How am I to~prove my claim
6 IV | an air, you look like a gentleman in that blue coat of yours
7 IV | time of nominating the mute gentleman~for a deputy. Lucien as
8 IV | shape; and Lucien took this gentleman,~not for a granite guard-post,
9 IV | to find out if the good gentleman had a~hobby of any sort
10 IV | was~beginning to give this gentleman some uneasiness; and, as
11 IV | and~sunburned, a haughty gentleman, about as amiable as a wild
12 IV | with them came the country gentleman who had brought the~treatise
13 VI | with him; and, putting that gentleman first, hoped to~find a surprise
14 VII| courtesy prescribes to a gentleman; but in contempt of~these,
15 VII| like a man of spirit and a~gentleman, and you will have a right
16 VII| behave, dear; you are a gentleman,"~said his wife. She felt
17 VII| what to say," and the good gentleman racked his brains to~compose
18 VII| Stanislas, whom~the injured gentleman accosted politely.~ ~Chatelet
19 VII| Yes," said the old gentleman, well pleased to find a
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