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1 I | To Henri de Balzac, his brother Honore.~The Comte de Fontaine,
2 II | traded~in salt; and the third brother, faithful to his plebeian
3 IV | rose, and followed~by her brother the General, she made her
4 IV | impertinence,~began talking to her brother in a louder voice than good
5 IV | reason, less to amuse her brother than to~attract the attention
6 V | views from the garden. Her brother lent~himself with malicious
7 V | of the garden," said her brother.~"We may go back to the
8 VI | out of the~sister than the brother, in the form of confidences.
9 VI | Clara Longueville and her brother, whom the~servants persisted
10 VI | more mother-~wit than her brother, for she did not even look
11 VIII| scornful air.~ ~"Only my brother," he replied.~ ~Emilie could
12 VIII| secretary went on, "to find my brother~here. On arriving from Vienna
13 VIII| Then, monsieur, your brother is not, like you, in diplomatic~
14 VIII| saving up a little capital my~brother joined a banking firm, and
15 VIII| think of him?"~ ~"Well, your brother's face does not look to
16 VIII| the silent brow?"~ ~"Your brother is in love, then?" she asked,
17 VIII| not you who pointed out my brother? When he is the theme I
18 VIII| she found that~he was the brother of her scorned lover.~ ~"
19 VIII| being grieved, see your brother selling muslin~and calico?"
20 VIII| glanced inquiringly from his brother to his partner, guessed~
21 VIII| handsomest person~here; my brother keeps stealing glances at
22 VIII| the Embassy took up his brother's quarrel, and contrived
23 VIII| death, and then that of his brother,~killed by the severe climate
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