Part, Chapter
1 I,I | the day when scientific men are brought to recognize~
2 I,I | vinegar~merchants and mustard men who command in the National
3 I,I | your obedient servant' like men of the world; how then do~
4 I,I | Can he take in such men as Pillerault, as Charles
5 I,I | well."~ ~"At a certain age men will turn their souls inside
6 I,I | it grow. Since the peace, men are more with women, and~
7 I,II | they should be oppressed by men, or by circumstances, wheresoever
8 I,II | Dressed like other young men of an epoch when~fashion
9 I,II | Jesus,--in fact, a king of men."~ ~Constance frankly abdicated
10 I,II | among the~fashionable young men of the Empire. If Cesar
11 I,II | epidermis. Truly scientific men--men who are really great in
12 I,II | the more to women, and to men a means of seduction~which
13 I,II | this could be, if all the men who were thought superior
14 I,II | personal interest, he despised men too much, believing them~
15 I,II | unbosomed~his opinions on men and life in a way to shock
16 I,II | Bourbons the various~trades and men of arts and sciences, included
17 I,II | presiding at~the birth of men had denied the faculty of
18 I,III| shortened like those of men in whom scrofulous~humors,
19 I,III| social flattery to paint men forever under~false colors,
20 I,III| service which infatuated old men seldom forget.~ ~One evening,
21 I,III| that providence of young men of family) to find~out how
22 I,III| played in the world by~such men as Werbrust and Gigonnet,
23 I,III| without budding; for the men who hate most are usually
24 I,III| on the stomach.~ ~Among men the most chaste of bourgeois
25 I,III| him; but you see, Popinot,~men buried in the depths of
26 I,IV | Contrary to the custom of men of talent you are punctual,
27 I,IV | come to my ball,~monsieur? Men of talent are not all disdainful
28 I,IV | the heads of all the young men,~especially the clerks,
29 I,IV | mingled with those of other men, to bring it~fully out.
30 I,V | restrained like~that of all men who are strong without assumption,
31 I,V | belonged to that working-~men's party which the Revolution
32 I,V | an old soldier (the two men best able to estimate life),
33 I,V | much in his nose; and like men who can't have~women, he
34 I,V | the greatest scientific men in~France, to get at the
35 I,V | we are both commercial men."~ ~"Pretty nearly, monsieur,"
36 I,V | Though the~majority of men may be ignorant of the causes
37 I,V | beautiful women and~puny men, or between ugly little
38 I,V | little creatures and handsome men. Every man~who is cursed
39 I,V | which are habitual~to other men. If he takes the first course
40 I,V | better how to love than men of irreproachable~bodily
41 I,V | the midriff of ambitious men~and lovers intent on high
42 I,VI | intoxication which inferior men are~unable to resist. Cesar'
43 I,VI | eye upon me; successful men~incur jealousy, envy. Ah!
44 I,VI | the street. The sight of men~working by torchlight--for
45 I,VI | current of affairs.~All men of great talent lead curious
46 I,VII| Monsieur Gaudissart,~two young men who are very useful to Monsieur
47 I,VII| last brackets, and three men~were lighting the rooms.~ ~"
48 I,VII| Cesarine, who thought all men walked ungracefully if they
49 I,VII| a true philosopher. The men were dreadful,--all, that~
50 I,VII| excitement of the moment; the men are heated,~their hair,
51 I,I | who are most intolerant of men~in their dealings with the
52 I,I | go by default against the men we have dined~with, who
53 I,I | have given us fine balls,--men of the world, in short.~
54 I,II | himself like other busy men in the~turbulent and seething
55 I,II | eyes Cesar~lessened, as men lessen in presence of disasters
56 I,II | some time to speak with two men, who rushed in~from the
57 I,II | the banker~had seen all men put on when they wanted
58 I,III| of thinking from his own, men who were his~political enemies,
59 I,III| nothing, you know. Young men are sometimes in~positions
60 I,III| with empty promises. Even men of the world, and sometimes~
61 I,III| like children by business men,~bankers, and lawyers, who
62 I,IV | understand? You have got solid men behind you, so~I'm not afraid,
63 I,IV | Such master-strokes need men.~There's the man of genius
64 I,IV | who hasn't a sou--like all men of genius.~Those fellows
65 I,IV | clap-trap of commerce. We buy up men of~arts and sciences; the
66 I,IV | business;~quite the contrary. Men who quaff the sparkling
67 I,IV | taking that step, honorable men who have forty years of~
68 I,IV | integrity to boast of, virtuous men seeking to save their good
69 I,IV | that women are nearer than men~to angelic nature, in that
70 I,V | the~rounds among business men to-day. You might hawk about
71 I,V | anguish. Curse neither the men who injure you nor~the God
72 I,V | heaped upon the Saviour of men. Meditate upon the agonies~
73 I,V | could be more natural. All men can better~bear a known
74 I,V | forced~to blush before the men I had injured, to bear their
75 I,V | could not have borne. Many men take up their business~as
76 I,V | of integrity~among honest men.~ ~"The King has just appointed
77 I,V | at "The Queen of Roses." Men who had shed~their blood
78 I,VI | enormously, the knavery of men's minds. The object of a~
79 I,VI | snatching a few morsels for men of influence,--in short,
80 I,VI | can be impeached, prudent men are careful to enter upon~
81 I,VI | called it foolishness; but~men of sense held it up to its
82 I,VII| the feelings with~which men view them and the degree
83 I,VII| degree of grandeur which men's thoughts~attach to them.
84 I,VII| ought to~be in the eyes of men,--a representation of society
85 I,VII| demands~profound study of men and things, which subdues
86 I,VII| rare thing~nowadays to find men who mount the stairway of
87 I,VII| Birotteau was one of~those men.~ ~Few persons have noticed
88 I,VII| man can~only be pardoned. Men of honor alone can imagine
89 I,VII| virtues. Youth sees neither men nor~things through spectacles;
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