1170-cages | cajol-deplo | depre-forem | fores-intro | intru-opera | oppon-regre | regul-state | stati-viole | virgi-zeal
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Chapter grey = Comment text
2502 I | gives~way at once if an opponent touches his feelings. His
2503 I | your future partner, I am opposed~to your replacing these
2504 III | and when they were~almost opposite the cathedral she stopped,
2505 V | whose intellects pine in an oppressive moral atmosphere, who die
2506 VIII | crowned~by the wreath of orange blossoms and the bridal
2507 VI | and began one of her long~orations, interlarded with high-sounding
2508 V | prefatory announcement was no oratorical flourish, but a statement
2509 VIII | and ambassadors, and great orators from the Chamber of Deputies,
2510 I | sentiment~into self-seeking, ordinarily slow, tortuous, and veiled
2511 II | State~factory of marine ordnance in France was established
2512 II | that lay like undiscovered ore in her nature, profited
2513 VIII | him as the Furies followed Orestes, for he had~glimmerings
2514 III | cathedral, he played the organ, sent those who knew no
2515 I | decorated with wall-paper--~Oriental scenes in sepia tint--and
2516 V | everything. "We used to deal~in Ossianic mists, Malvinas and Fingals
2517 IV | personages of Angouleme with ostentatious courtesy and elaborate~graciousness;
2518 II | appeared during that sudden outburst of first vigorous~growth
2519 III | manner is not the invariable outcome~of noble feeling; and while
2520 III | would~believe the truth. The outcry was terrific. Some were
2521 VI | rather make the~smaller outlay in the first instance, and,
2522 III | clean cut and strongly outlined, shone a pair of bright
2523 II | meadows. The crag is an outlying spur on the Perigord side
2524 V | beautiful--since it was the~outpouring of all the love in his heart,
2525 V | that the revenge of so many outraged vanities would be incomplete~
2526 IV | manufacture, and exhibited outrageous combinations of crude~colors
2527 VI | scarcely allowed; and such outrageously~scandalous constructions
2528 III | from the world. The~only outsider intimate there was the bishop;
2529 VIII | about~her brows, and arms outstretched to talent of every kind.
2530 V | world; if~it was true in the outward world for Adam, it is true
2531 VI | de Bargeton and Lucien outweighed twelve~years of Zizine's
2532 III | ardent expression of an oval~face; it was as if the royal
2533 II | higher, and~fears that being over-bold he is like to fall. This
2534 II | affectation and sentimental~over-refinements; she queened it with her
2535 III | At first, while he was overawed by her~rank, Lucien experienced
2536 VI | through Beaulieu, and he overheard chance phrases that filled~
2537 VIII | which you will~succeed; overleap the gulf that separates
2538 III | those in power are~always overlooked--once let them abdicate,
2539 II | crag like a sugar-~loaf, overlooking the plain where the Charente
2540 III | cloak and shawl, and put~on overshoes and hats in the old corridor,
2541 VI | immediate provocation of the overt step. That~step many a woman
2542 VIII | shall start first. I will overtake you between Mansle and~Ruffec,
2543 VIII | afraid that Lucien might be~overwhelmed by the sacrifices made for
2544 VI | two years and one-quarter owing, you know, my boy; that~
2545 I | press that could go at that pace?" the parent~asked of his
2546 III | insurrection of self-love was pacified. These ladies all hoped
2547 I | compositors' slang. The continued pacing to and fro of the pressman~
2548 III | less insolent that this pack of dolts in Angouleme. You
2549 I | were lying about on the~packages.~ ~The bedroom was lighted
2550 VIII | for good or~evil. Eve soon packed Lucien's clothes; the Fernando
2551 I | Sechard pounced upon some packets of unused sorts, and held
2552 V | some authorities; or~at Padua, in 1301, by an Italian
2553 II | every misfortune;~she sang paeans for every victory. She sympathized
2554 VI | Eve and David listening~in pained silence to a torrent of
2555 I | David)~would only waste his pains if he gave them the finest
2556 III | veiled. He was ignorant of painting, but he could copy a~landscape,
2557 III | gray. There were~monochrome paintings on the frieze panels, and
2558 VI | fine~sentiment by building palaces for you, does it? . . .
2559 II | outdid the mythical feats of paladins of old. The cities of~France,
2560 V | vociferation, as a coarse palate~is ticked by strong spirits.~ ~
2561 III | quoted instances. Bernard~Palissy, Louis XI., Fox, Napoleon,
2562 IV | but while the Bishop was pallid, his Vicar-General's~countenance
2563 III | unconsciously Lucien stood with the palm of genius~on the one hand
2564 II | abundance of her heart. She~palpitated, swooned, and went into
2565 III | English prototype to~turn pamphleteer and revile his benefactors.
2566 III | with a quatrain, flat as a pancake, wherein~rhyme did duty
2567 I | itself against~the window pane and flown away again.~ ~"
2568 I | by a window with~leaded panes, and hung with the old-world
2569 VIII | caused the poor lover cruel pangs. The~cost of carrying out
2570 I | by the divine author of Pantagruel; though of~late, by reason
2571 V | a kind of Christianized Pantheism, enriched with the most~
2572 I | covered with the~curved pantiles in common use in the South
2573 VII | and accompanied it with pantomime, which made~the thing prodigiously
2574 V | lying below the wheels of a paper-mill. "Let me~breathe the evening
2575 IV | discovered~rummaging among his papers, hunting for a stray note
2576 IV | got by heart a newspaper paragraph~on a patent plow, was giving
2577 V | Bargeton, and the words~paralyzed the laughter, and drew astonished
2578 V | of seraphim, and all the paraphernalia of~paradise freshened up
2579 VIII | and asked him to keep the parcel~until Lucien sent for it.~ ~
2580 V | reduced to pulp and boiled. Parchment~had become so extremely
2581 V | Rome is still~the Magna Parens of Virgil?"~ ~The women
2582 I | as to prolong the time of parental rule,~making him work at
2583 II | became little better than a pariah. Hence the deep,~smothered
2584 IV | with a desire to~look like Parisiennes, and neglected their homes,
2585 I | himself, and this piece of parsimony was the ruin of the old
2586 III | shadow of the~curls that only partially hid her neck. Beneath a
2587 III | illegal superfetation of the particle. Lucien was~forced upon
2588 III | had the wit to adopt the particle--M. du Chatelet was one of
2589 III | specific gravity.~But in this particular art or craft, as in all
2590 VI | Chardon~arranged picnic parties in provincial fashion--a
2591 VIII | they were losing in the parting, and the~happiness to come
2592 VI | should not seek to enlist partisans. "What do you~yourself think?"
2593 I | plant there was a deed of partnership~between Sechard senior and
2594 V | During the interval, as they partook of ices, Zephirine despatched~
2595 Addendum | other addendum references parts one and three are combined~
2596 II | dislikes. Her mind ran on the Pasha of Janina; she~would have
2597 III | clever billiard-player, a passable amateur actor, he danced
2598 III | of the copyright of the passages of~declamation that disfigure
2599 III | many a would-be patrician passes by way of prelude to~his
2600 VIII | as a flirtation, a mere passing fancy on his~daughter's
2601 I | surgeon's ambition lay in his passionate love~for his wife, the last
2602 I | with Mme. de Bargeton?"~ ~"Passionately."~ ~"But social prejudices
2603 I | chases, wetting-boards,~paste-pots, rinsing-trough, and lye-brushes
2604 III | down to a stage dinner of pasteboard. No words, therefore,~can
2605 II | flowing hidden among green pastures. She adored~Byron and Jean-Jacques
2606 I | his wine-troubled eye a patch overlooked by the apprentice,
2607 I | still~curling about his bald pate. He was short and corpulent,
2608 III | with the Romantics with a patience hardly to be~expected of
2609 III | through which many a would-be patrician passes by way of prelude
2610 V | nice,~but the ladies feel a patriotic preference for the wine
2611 I | for themselves between the patronage of the~Liberals on the one
2612 III | bold step and renounce his patronymic for the noble name of Rubempre;~
2613 IV | his penknife, and drawing patterns on his blotting-paper. He
2614 VI | length they came upon the paved road of L'Houmeau, the ambitious~
2615 V | the~church, tapping the pavement with his wand; when silence,
2616 V | 1301, by an Italian named Pax, according to others. In~
2617 I | easy in his mind as to the~payment. To the throes of the vendor,
2618 IV | lover of a married woman~pays for his happiness--deceits
2619 II | her account as for his own peace of mind.~A noble or a country
2620 I | literature and science since the Peace--~the poems of Schiller,
2621 VI | her white hands wiped the pearls of sweat from the brows
2622 I | they looked dark against a pearly setting, and dewy and fresh
2623 I | to~gain his point, as a peasant brings in his wife.~ ~His
2624 I | at this point.~ ~Hither, pede titubante, Jerome-Nicolas
2625 II | would~have been a duke and a peer of France, like many another;
2626 I | tendrils. The little gray eyes, peering out from beneath thick~eyebrows
2627 I | as if she were living at~Pekin and you in Greenland."~ ~"
2628 IV | old-fashioned cut-glass pendants had been stripped~of its
2629 III | from which he had emerged. Pending the decease of genius,~Chatelet
2630 II | flower of his troops to the Peninsula, her~disappointed hopes
2631 IV | figures out of corks with~his penknife, and drawing patterns on
2632 VIII | way, of sinecures, of~a pension from the civil list. The
2633 I | woodshed, and in a ramshackle penthouse against the hall~at the
2634 III | strong scent of camomile and peppermint pervaded the yard and the~
2635 III | pleased with all~this. He perceived rather too late in the day
2636 V | birth-rate. To make any~perceptible difference in the population
2637 V | manufacture of paper was perfected slowly and in~obscurity;
2638 III | him Italian and~German and perfecting his manners. That would
2639 III | into~ecstasies over the performance, and stimulated the interest
2640 V | her boudoir during these~performances. She was followed by the
2641 IV | M. Alexandre de Brebian performed heroic exploits in sepia;
2642 IV | was supposed to be a good~performer on the piano, and her mother
2643 II | for a public that daily performs the~difficult feat of swallowing
2644 III | embellished account of his perilous wanderings; but while he~
2645 II | proportions. It was at this period of her career that she began
2646 VIII | seek out the talent that perishes for~lack of light in a little
2647 IV | short observations did not permit of discussion; a "Yes" or~"
2648 VI | or a finger. They are not permitted to be human; they~are required
2649 I | of~late, by reason of the persecution of societies yclept of Temperance,~
2650 VI | find a surprise by such perseverance in pursuit of the chance.
2651 V | turned, gave~him courage to persevere to the end, but this poet'
2652 III | attractive about well-doing when~persisted in through evil report;
2653 III | before her marriage, and a persona grata at Court.~The words "
2654 III | possessed every qualification. Personable and of a good figure, a~
2655 V | he was damp with chilly~perspiration; a glowing glance from Louise,
2656 VI | had gone over to Marsac to persuade his father to come to the~
2657 VI | by~observations extremely pertinent. It was hardly to be expected
2658 III | went with him as far as St. Peter's Gate, and when they were~
2659 VI | gradually given him les petites~entrees, in the language
2660 V | behind Mme. de Bargeton's petticoat. And at the selfsame moment
2661 III | Liberal~became a Monarchist in petto; Lucien set his teeth in
2662 VI | strife by a piece of vehement petulence, at which a~woman laughs
2663 II | families formed a serried phalanx~to keep out intruders. Of
2664 III | POSTEL (LATE CHARDON), PHARMACEUTICAL CHEMIST,~ ~in yellow letters
2665 III | bitter Republicanism, a phase of opinion~through which
2666 IV | for a long while at this phenomenon of the~perfect union of
2667 III | hostile mobs of aristocrats or philistines by repeated~successful strokes,
2668 VII | those who held that he was a~philosopher of the school of Pythagoras.~ ~
2669 I | tribes of the New World.~But philosophers inform us that old age is
2670 I | him; and in a spirit of philosophical curiosity, he tried to find
2671 V | results~of whole systems of philosophy in a few picturesque lines;
2672 III | Lucien began to dread the~Phocion's axe which David could
2673 II | Such a man would be the phoenix of sons-in-law.~ ~To M.
2674 IV | may be told in a single phrase--they were~as poor as they
2675 III | s letter lying among the physic bottles in a~druggist's
2676 I | originality to an ursine physiognomy; his nose had developed
2677 I | on, taking up an unused pica type.~ ~David saw that there
2678 VI | and Mme. Chardon~arranged picnic parties in provincial fashion--
2679 VI | drain every~wound that they pierce. But I was happy; I lived.
2680 V | life might be; think of~the piercing eyes that have seen nothing,
2681 VI | printers' readers; Fourier and~Pierre Leroux are Lachevardiere'
2682 IV | Nobody had docketed and~pigeon-holed YOU, in fact. Take advantage
2683 VI | years was nothing but a pigsty, not fit for the girl out
2684 IV | of newspaper articles and pillage of previous writers. It
2685 III | virtues, and pulled down the pillars of society, small wonder
2686 V | speak to the Marquise de Pimentel--"Do you not see~a strong
2687 V | hear the~verdict of the Pimentels and the Rastignacs, and
2688 IV | complexion was spoiled already by pimples due to liver complaint,~
2689 IV | this prolonged ordeal of pin-~pricks; it put him still
2690 IV | Mother and daughter had the pinched sub-acid dignity~characteristic
2691 VI | bore the hardships and the pinching thrift without grumbling.
2692 V | by fate,~whose intellects pine in an oppressive moral atmosphere,
2693 V | her dress for a gown of pink cambric covered~with narrow
2694 IV | was a solemn~and extremely pious woman, and a very trying
2695 VIII | twill and a rose-colored~piping at the edges. So pretty!
2696 III | report; innocence has the piquancy of the~forbidden.~ ~Mme.
2697 II | both sides to the~highest pitch of exasperation.~ ~Nearly
2698 III | and told with tears the piteous story of a love so~stainless,
2699 III | old-fashioned furniture~shrank piteously from sight under covers
2700 VII | She is all the more to be pitied because she is making herself~
2701 Dedication| to be, like a Rafael or a Pitt, a great~poet at an age
2702 I | their frugal thrift, the pittance was scarcely~sufficient;
2703 III | ruddy countenance much~pitted with the smallpox; at the
2704 V | glad, to reckon Earth's pitying tears,~Given with alms of
2705 I | and see what we make by~placards and the registers at the
2706 III | covering the cities of the plain--the hideous winding-sheet
2707 VI | clerk, named~Petit-Claud, a plain-featured youth who had been at school
2708 VI | arguments on the~intellectual plane, while, at the same time,
2709 I | by so~doing gave them a plank to cling to--the Sechards
2710 IV | he stood, happy and~mute, planted like a swan on both feet,
2711 I | beautiful work for~the Elzevirs, Plantin, Aldus, and Didot is so
2712 IV | joists and the~spaces of plaster between, he saw, not without
2713 I | dinner, empty bottles and plates, were lying about on the~
2714 I | iron tie-bars, cast-iron~plates----' "~ ~"An improvement
2715 VI | granted--love was still in the Platonic stage, to the great despair
2716 V | Charles VI., paper pulp for playing-cards was made in Paris.~ ~When
2717 I | of an art which workmen pleasantly call "tipple-ography," an~
2718 IV | appeared to them so rare and pleasing a spectacle, that if M.~
2719 III | best shirt, and washed~and pleated it with her own hands. And
2720 I | the~same time, David must pledge himself thenceforward to
2721 VIII | place in~the succession of pleiades that rise from generation
2722 IV | M. du Chatelet gallantly plied the queen with fulsome~compliments,
2723 I | sabots that your father~has plodded on with these twenty years;
2724 IV | newspaper paragraph~on a patent plow, was giving the Baron the
2725 V | poet's~aureole had been plucked away, the landowners had
2726 IV | deciphering the sublime,~of plumbing the depths to discover the
2727 V | angels,~seistrons, the plumes of seraphim, and all the
2728 III | heardthe~controller of excise pluming himself on having effected
2729 IV | Amelie de Chandour, short, plump, fair-complexioned, and
2730 IV | Agriculture by wholesale plunder~of newspaper articles and
2731 IV | for~weak intellects; he plunged you into the most intimate
2732 VI | money into the coopers' pockets. Why,~are you going to marry
2733 I | mind, they had attained to poesy. Lucien, destined for~the
2734 V | idleness, that debauches a poetic soul. Yes, it~makes me tremble
2735 II | dramatize, superiorize, analyze,~poetize, angelize, neologize, tragedify,
2736 V | all languages. If~this is poetry--to give ideas such definite
2737 VIII | making puns on the name. (Tue Poie.) It seems that M. de Chandour
2738 I | Sechard senior is a case in point--the older he grew,~the better
2739 IV | to present two menacing~points--one spike reached the height
2740 IV | the limited kind, exactly poised on~the border line between
2741 V | One by one he drew out the~poisoned shafts on his way home,
2742 III | circle, and was received as a poisonous element, which~every person
2743 VI | each of his neighbor. These polemics kept~Mme. de Bargeton and
2744 I | now; on the contrary,~wise policy required that they should
2745 I | the strong oaken cheeks,~polished up by the apprentice.~ ~"
2746 I | much as a~horse-dealer polishes the coat of an animal that
2747 VI | literature, science, and politics.~ ~"One day, in my office,
2748 I | have you done with your 'polls?' " he asked, returning
2749 III | with a variety of her most pompous~epithets. It was an infringement
2750 II | To M. de Negrepelisse pondering over the eligible bachelors
2751 Addendum | The Atheist's Mass~Cousin Pons~The Thirteen~The Government
2752 VII | Bargeton's exploits."~ ~"Pooh! Put them at twenty paces,
2753 III | the extinguisher on the portable stove, where it had~been
2754 VI | seize an opportunity of posing as a good father without~
2755 IV | all occasions. If he was positively obliged to express his personal~
2756 III | indeed, this kind of skill~possesses one signal advantage, for
2757 I | and David entered~into possession of three bare, unfurnished
2758 VI | not happy? To be the sole~possessor of a heart, to speak freely
2759 I | caught a glimpse of the possibility of making a fortune,~a growing
2760 IV | not hand down my name to~posterity."~ ~At this moment Mme.
2761 I | of~masks for theatrical posters became in turn objects of
2762 II | Carriers, wheelwrights, posthouses, and inns, every~agency
2763 I | David begged his parent to~postpone serious matters until the
2764 I | Jerome-Nicolas Sechard, after copious~potations, began with a "Now for business,"
2765 IV | the airs of a king of the poultry-yard, airs which~were prodigiously
2766 I | Look here!"~ ~Old Sechard pounced upon some packets of unused
2767 I | passive while~his father poured out a flood of reasons--
2768 VI | the history of his agony, pouring out a flood of~clamorous
2769 VI | answered, with a lover's pout of vexation.~ ~"Child!"
2770 IV | somebody else," the poor~sister pouted, flushing red.~ ~"We shall
2771 V | and Heaven,~Helpless and powerless against the invincible armor
2772 VIII | tried to prevent them from practising with the pistols,~but they
2773 III | in fact; the cleverest~practitioner is he who can swim with
2774 VIII | mother on their knees in prayer. The women felt sure that
2775 III | third. But in spite of this precaution, the whole town knew the
2776 VIII | spite of Mme. de Bargeton's precautions, Chatelet found out that~
2777 III | Here was a novel order of precedence for~snubbed authority; such
2778 III | himself in those~aristocratic precincts.~ ~She went with him as
2779 VII | moment, but the~spies beat a precipate retreat like intruders,
2780 II | that his son-in-law in~fact predeceased him), and Nais' brilliant
2781 III | so with the~others, his predecessors; they had tamed society.
2782 VI | and his~like find a world predisposed in favor of youth and good
2783 I | reading the signature of~the preface.~ ~"After Chenier had written
2784 V | unlettered folk that the~prefatory announcement was no oratorical
2785 I | effect. The monopoly of the prefectorial and diocesan work passed~
2786 V | ladies feel a patriotic preference for the wine of the~country;
2787 I | by declaring~that she was pregnant, a lie told without the
2788 IV | you, you can overcome any prejudice as to names by taking your~
2789 III | patrician passes by way of prelude to~his introduction to polite
2790 VI | that some~women feel for premeditation does honor to their delicacy;
2791 I | and with his scientific~preoccupation and finer nature he had
2792 VIII | breathe a syllable of it, and prepare to follow me.--Would you~
2793 VII | tittle-tattle, M. de Bargeton was~preparing to go to bed, and had opened
2794 VI | a~contract. In general, prescribed happiness is not the kind
2795 VII | has~claims which courtesy prescribes to a gentleman; but in contempt
2796 VIII | prices. You have only two presentable white waistcoats; I~have
2797 I | equal dexterity. The third presenting to~his wine-troubled eye
2798 V | struggle before me! God preserve you~from the enervating
2799 I | Liberal movement, David~preserved a most unlucky neutrality
2800 I | her child.~ ~Once, under pressure of the lack of money which
2801 I | working expenses, the old man pretended not to~understand. He had
2802 VIII | David had hired a cabriolet, pretending that he was going to Marsac
2803 IV | there was just that tinge~of pretension which betrayed carefully
2804 V | no use for him, the~more pretentious sort looked upon him as
2805 VI | who will forge ingenious pretexts for burying~themselves in
2806 VI | common vegetable product, not previously~manufactured, but taken
2807 IV | prolonged ordeal of pin-~pricks; it put him still more out
2808 III | provincial courtyard--chilly, prim, and neat; and the house~
2809 VI | struggle ends, is in reality a prime agent in bringing~such scandals
2810 I | machinery in use was the primitive wooden invention to which
2811 II | intermarriage or two with one of the~primordial houses, a family from some
2812 VI | maintained that~Chinese paper was principally made of an animal substance,
2813 V | industry no less than to the printing-press; but the long digression,~
2814 V | Believe me, Lucien's~horror of privation is so great, the savor of
2815 I | appear in the bankruptcy as a privileged creditor for~arrears of
2816 III | not procure a seat in the Privy Council for her private~
2817 III | as~the patient feels the probing of a wound.~ ~ ~ ~And now
2818 V | said David, trying to proceed to~love by way of analogy. "
2819 V | went to the~Bishop. Him he proceeded to mystify.~ ~He told the
2820 III | effected the~introduction, and proceeding in this character to give
2821 VI | even as Nature herself~proceeds. Perhaps articulate speech
2822 I | refining sugar by a chemical process, which would reduce the~
2823 VII | would simply be a public proclamation of his love. I need~not
2824 I | once put into circulation, produced their~effect. The monopoly
2825 VIII | intellectual world, which produces ever-~new glories and stimulates
2826 I | would reduce the~cost of production by one-half; and he had
2827 IV | rooms with a swarm of crude~productions, and spoiled all the albums
2828 II | undiscovered ore in her nature, profited her~nothing, underwent the
2829 II | ways of his illustrious~progenitors, Bargeton I. and Bargeton
2830 I | the lad harshly so as to prolong the time of parental rule,~
2831 VI | and went about~the house promiscuously and without a summons; they
2832 VIII | than a failure to keep such~promises as these; it is like mortification
2833 II | of Angouleme is a sort of~promontory marking out the line of
2834 I | the Abbe went, and Sechard promoted one of his four compositors~
2835 I | which the "bear" took for proof-sheets. Then he would~join David
2836 III | who flatters~him, for Nais prophesied great things and boundless
2837 V | linen rags, say that the proportion of~cotton in the pulp has
2838 I | hands.~ ~The news of this proposal sent by David to his father
2839 I | he was to be made~sole proprietor of the business.~ ~David
2840 I | publishers to the diocese, and~proprietors of the Charente Chronicle (
2841 VI | arranged with the utmost propriety. M. de Bargeton~pervaded
2842 I | countenance among his vine props; for he was always~in his
2843 II | angelize, neologize, tragedify, prosify, and colossify--you~must
2844 I | made a practice of sending prospectuses and circulars--job-~printing,
2845 IV | the old vanished days of prosperity.~White curtains hung in
2846 II | Houmeau grew into a busy and prosperous city, a~second Angouleme
2847 V | highest spirits know times of prostration at the~outset of life. Lucien
2848 VI | good looks, and~ready to protect those who give it pleasure
2849 III | quietly, with no fervid protestations. In their~secret souls they
2850 VIII | you think so much for me?" protested Eve, giving him a~divinely
2851 VI | for them~all. Unchecked by protests put in by Eve, he furnished
2852 III | earth that led his English prototype to~turn pamphleteer and
2853 III | of his Louise's love (his proudest distinction) if he did not~
2854 VI | brought an action against one Proust for an error in~weights
2855 VI | desired, like many~other provincials, to give herself as the
2856 VI | apprentice bringing the basket of provisions to some~place appointed
2857 VI | thought to the immediate provocation of the overt step. That~
2858 VI | bound, should~win her by his prowess in the field; he must eclipse "
2859 IV | little; both appeared to be prudent men, and their~silence and
2860 III | his~fortunes upon it, and prune it, and wait till he could
2861 IV | the field of verse."~ ~"Pshaw!" said the other, "a few
2862 I | being in a mighty hurry to publish the~Decrees of the Convention,
2863 II | the~famous foreign books published in France for the first
2864 III | there is an indefinable pudency inseparable from strong~
2865 IV | whole time in his study on puerilities, reading the~newspaper through
2866 IV | westward his old asthmatic pug-dog countenance, he~gazed at
2867 I | fellow from~the Didots will pull through."~ ~The septuagenarian
2868 VI | the banker, owner of the~pulping troughs of Bruges and Langlee (
2869 IV | kept them in shape. He wore pumps and thread~stockings; the
2870 VI | weighed down by her unmerited punishment,~will regret that she has
2871 VIII | meadow; people are~making puns on the name. (Tue Poie.)
2872 I | one of~the most brilliant pupils at the grammar school of
2873 VII | the man to trample this puppet under foot that~has smirched
2874 I | to~the completion of the purchase inevitably succeeds. Passion
2875 I | regard him as the natural purchaser of the business, whose~interests
2876 IV | think that such persons are purely~imaginary. Amelie de Chandour
2877 III | to the Imperial Highness. Purists were of the opinion that
2878 I | with bloated patches~of purple, madder red, and often mottled
2879 III | was said of them; he had purposely left them behind~because
2880 I | been devoted to its present purposes for a long time past. The~
2881 IV | poet in his mind called purse-proud impertinence.~ ~Sixte du
2882 I | farthing more."~ ~" 'Item,' " pursued David, " 'five thousand
2883 VIII | to David's~house, hopes pursuing him as the Furies followed
2884 VI | by such perseverance in pursuit of the chance. His own~part
2885 VI | of living in public, and~pushed to extremities by a tyranny
2886 IV | with which polite society puts~forward a "Yes" on the way
2887 I | cross bars. It would~have puzzled you to find a more dilapidated
2888 III | spoke~of stakes and flaming pyres; she spread the adjectives
2889 VII | philosopher of the school of Pythagoras.~ ~He reached Stanislas'
2890 IV | stood behind them. It was a quaint~assemblage of wrinkled countenances
2891 VII | de Chandour's house he quaked~inwardly.~ ~"What shall
2892 III | which he~possessed every qualification. Personable and of a good
2893 IV | between, he saw, not without qualms, that the little~chandelier
2894 III | of her brother, and what quantities of~advice she gave him!
2895 VIII | family. He~discovered any quantity of urgent reasons for his
2896 V | purpose, it would~take a quarter of a century and a great
2897 VI | comparison with~his late quarters in the tumbledown attic
2898 IV | c'est moi!" with Louis Quatorze? Lucien's~mother and sister
2899 III | impromptu, and return with a quatrain, flat as a pancake, wherein~
2900 II | since the reign of Henri Quatre, when the Negrepelisse of~
2901 II | in short, had lined the quays with~buildings.~ ~So the
2902 II | sentimental~over-refinements; she queened it with her foibles, after
2903 IV | third-rate theatres.~ ~One of the queerest figures in the rooms was
2904 Dedication| And why should Comedy, qui castigat ridendo~mores,
2905 III | would conquer at any cost, quibuscumque viis. To prove his courage,
2906 V | germs of another poetry,~quickened within them by the poet'
2907 I | with canopy, valances and quilt~of crimson serge, a couple
2908 IV | table of the time of~ ~Louis Quinze; then, recollecting that
2909 III | fluttered by the~serpentine quiverings; her manner was distinguished,
2910 V | Rebecca the Jewess, the Don Quixote of~Cervantes,--do we not
2911 VI | for~himself. This feminine Quixotry is a sentiment which hallows
2912 IV | catch his eye, and drag his quotation by~the heels into the conversation
2913 III | vociferated~with emphasis; the Quotidienne was comparatively Laodicean
2914 III | such a talent as his. The rabid Liberal~became a Monarchist
2915 III | conditions~of men sit crying Raca! with mutual anathemas--
2916 Dedication| birthright to be, like a Rafael or a Pitt, a great~poet
2917 VI | typography and paper-~making.~ ~"Rag-pickers collect all the rags and
2918 VI | While~this storm in a teacup raged on high, a few drops fell
2919 III | genius was always noble. She railed at boorish~squires for understanding
2920 III | sight of the green iron railings his~heart failed. Perhaps
2921 I | house had stood in sun and~rain, and borne the brunt of
2922 IV | mind, as it were, against a rainy day. Now was the~proper
2923 III | religion, the~objections she raises are so many redoubts which
2924 III | the Angoumoisin Hotel de~Rambouillet, shining at a solar distance;
2925 I | other the woodshed, and in a ramshackle penthouse against the hall~
2926 VIII | allow your ideas to grow rancid in the provinces; put yourself
2927 V | mentioned, every murmur rang in Lucien's ear; he saw
2928 V | the poet must continually range~through the entire scale
2929 II | twelve thousand francs, they ranked among the half-dozen largest~
2930 V | who made their own~dresses rankled in Lolotte's mind.~ ~"Since
2931 IV | we recognize the truth of~Raphael's great saying--"To comprehend
2932 VIII | words, and bewildered by the~rapid bird's-eye view of Paris
2933 III | raved about him, went into raptures, talked of him for~whole
2934 V | of the Pimentels and the Rastignacs, and formed a little group~
2935 III | yet~here I live in this rat-hole!" he said to himself this
2936 IV | understand one day the inverse ratio of the squares of~distances!"~ ~
2937 III | this poet, this~angel! She raved about him, went into raptures,
2938 I | with the swiftness of~the raven that scents the corpses
2939 II | perched aloft like wary ravens on their crag; the~said
2940 V | in~whom God has set some ray of this light," said the
2941 VI | frightened her, and her terror reacted upon the fond talk that
2942 I | Indifferent to the religious reaction brought about by the~Restoration,
2943 V | with Chenier's spirited~reactionary Iambes. Several persons,
2944 III | shop~front, where you could read--~ ~POSTEL (LATE CHARDON),
2945 I | form of type was~placed in readiness for the sheet of paper,
2946 V | to attend while somebody reads aloud after~dinner, it upsets
2947 VII | behave at great crises with a ready-made solemnity. If they say~little,
2948 V | would convert my hopes into realities, and begin to live like
2949 VIII | s~return would bring the realization of many hopes; but at the
2950 III | every social level,~will realize the awe with which the bourgeoisie
2951 II | them which could only be~realized by a complete and general
2952 I | men over ways of~promptly realizing a large fortune; and, after
2953 I | leading the lines, till a ream of~damp paper weighted with
2954 I | with accumulated grime. Reams of blank paper or printed
2955 V | excused himself. When he reappeared, nobody took the slightest
2956 I | managed to control within reasonable bounds the passion~for the
2957 VI | middle of the fantastic reasonings, with which Louise convinced
2958 VIII | after the rest had gone to reassure Stanislas and his~wife,
2959 V | Beaumarchais' Figaro, Scott's Rebecca the Jewess, the Don Quixote
2960 II | was sure to break into~rebellion against his niggardliness,
2961 III | to the~mortification of a rebuff. The forthcoming soiree
2962 III | velvet, a head-dress that recalls memories of mediaeval legend~
2963 III | command, the prefect, the receiver-~general, and the bishop
2964 II | of yesterday.~ ~Prefects, receivers-general, and various administrations
2965 | recently
2966 IV | the company, met with a~reception of chilling silence; the
2967 VIII | too much, you have been reckless."~ ~David smiled by way
2968 II | squandered superlatives~recklessly in her talk, and the smallest
2969 VII | beheld Lucien in tears, half reclining on the floor, with his head~
2970 V | guileful Francis, as any recognition of her talents--he worshiped
2971 VI | thousand~francs!" but he recollected just in time that he had
2972 IV | of~ ~Louis Quinze; then, recollecting that he must conciliate
2973 I | choice on the future bishop's recommendation~of the man as an honest
2974 I | his own living, so as to recompense his poor old father, who
2975 IV | trimming of a dress, or the reconciliation of~several irreconcilable
2976 III | still~lively; when he had reconnoitred the men and found them nought,
2977 III | law; it was his mission to~reconstruct law; the man who is master
2978 III | sight under covers of a red-and-white check~pattern. On the sofa,
2979 III | dignity of~womanhood. Her red-gold hair, escaping from under
2980 IV | jealous,~he thought; he reddened under it, looked in the
2981 I | about the coral lips, yet redder as they seemed by force~
2982 VIII | made him feel~that he must redeem his mistake.~ ~"Come, come,"
2983 V | in such reverent awe as redeemed souls know on~beholding
2984 I | further for emotion.--"A~poet rediscovered by a poet!" said Lucien,
2985 V | sips watched him with redoubled interest. The poet, luckless
2986 III | objections she raises are so many redoubts which she loves to have~
2987 VI | manufacturer washes the~rags and reduces them to a thin pulp, which
2988 VI | The~bamboo is a kind of reed; naturally I began to think
2989 Addendum | story. In other addendum references parts one and three are
2990 V | will look on my fears as a refinement of friendship. You~and your
2991 I | had talked of a~method of refining sugar by a chemical process,
2992 II | France, however avaricious or refractory, must perforce do honor
2993 V | 1170, by a colony of Greek refugees, according to some authorities;
2994 V | up yours for me. When you~refused to go to Mme. de Bargeton'
2995 III | de Bargeton~with her most regal air. "She is a druggist'
2996 III | the elderly coxcomb, and regardless of his threats and~airs
2997 II | ridotto given to the town by a regiment, and fell~in love with an
2998 I | make by~placards and the registers at the Prefecture, and the
2999 VI | unmerited punishment,~will regret that she has never known
3000 VI | made an end.~"Do not sow regrets in the present time, so
3001 III | Bargeton complimented him, regretting~that she had no opportunity
|