Part, Chapter
1 I,V | mind and heart, thought and speech, words and acts. He was
2 I,VI | motions as well as about his speech; drawing back his hand when
3 I,VI | clashed and~jangled with his speech. But these worthy people
4 I,VI | to deliver the following~speech, which he divided by gestures
5 I,VII| of the rich upholsterer's speech.~Braschon made a dozen useless
6 I,VII| the abbe's~wrinkles; his speech was gentle, slow, and penetrating.
7 I,VII| the real meaning of the speech which Molineux~delivered
8 I,II | before,~and the impromptu speech of the great man. In the
9 I,II | his favor and his fervid~speech, as he made plain to them
10 I,III| Carried away by the lust of speech~peculiar to those who are
11 I,III| instance, as in the case of his speech to du Tillet, the worthy~
12 I,V | being~from whose mind human speech slips like water from a
13 I,VI | desk and sign it.~ ~At this speech, all the fortune creditors
14 I,VII| assumed an air and manner and speech which~put Cesar at his ease;
15 I,VII| clerk, who listened to this speech with unutterable emotion.
16 I,VII| paid you in full."~ ~This speech, ringing with integrity,
17 I,VII| de Grandville pronounce a speech, of~which the following
18 I,VII| caftan of honor which the speech of the~illustrious /procureur-general/
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