Part, Chapter
1 I,II | Nevertheless, having little confidence in~his own lights, he consulted
2 I,II | worthy. Success gave him confidence. In Paris confidence is
3 I,II | him confidence. In Paris confidence is accepted~as power, of
4 I,II | and asked if he had no confidence in him. Matifat and two
5 I,III| wormed himself into~his confidence, was presented to la belle
6 I,III| flattered the lover by~this confidence, and people in love are
7 I,IV | in spite of his extreme confidence, felt uneasy. The~excited
8 I,V | Ragons, he put implicit confidence in Roguin. To his mind~the
9 I,VII| face, so plain as to check confidence,~had grown sublime through
10 I,I | the day before.~Our mutual confidence is all that saved me. Whether
11 I,I | derived energy from the~confidence born of illusions. Possibly,
12 I,I | slept.~Before assailing the confidence of a life-long friendship,
13 I,II | reach a state of peaceful confidence. In Paris the~astringent
14 I,II | as the expansive flow of confidence is slow in gathering way.~
15 I,II | him. He took Celestin into~confidence so far as to admit a momentary
16 I,II | and happy to obtain your~confidence. You are one of those consistent
17 I,IV | and his~eye beaming with confidence, now, unstrung by perplexity,
18 I,V | thought~to be wholly in his confidence. Not only did the count
19 I,VII| Cesar with a little air of~confidence. "Be good and sweet; talk
20 I,VII| your happiness, demand this confidence; but you~must let it die
21 I,VII| showed to what extent the confidence of Roguin's~clients had
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