Chapter
1 I | compositor, reader, and foreman in one; and an Abbe who
2 I | estimates, he managed to pay a foreman's~wages. The once easy-going
3 I | his four compositors~to be foreman, making his choice on the
4 I | the same time, and Didot's foreman became a scholar; and yet
5 I | the yard at the back; the foreman sat in state in the one,
6 I | of plant~drawn up by the foreman under his direction.~ ~"
7 I | francs a year without a foreman. As your future partner,
8 I | room he saw his son and the foreman~reading books, which the "
9 I | asked for~rent. The old foreman, who had gone over to the
10 I | month,~out of which the foreman's salary must be paid, as
11 I | book trade;~but master and foreman, deep in absorbing intellectual
12 I | where the master printer and foreman sat--and~you will have some
13 I | Yes, sir," said the foreman.~ ~"I am fortunate in this
14 IV| position is different. A foreman is not committed to anything.
15 V | he himself is a printer's~foreman."~ ~"If his father sold
16 V | Bargeton's, he must not be my foreman any longer, poor fellow!
17 VI| she is going to marry~her foreman Courtois, but you are the
18 VI| ceased to be a printer's~foreman; he was M. de Rubempre,
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