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1 I | demand it.~ ~Pierrotin, a man about forty years of age,
2 I | really got it?" asked the man, laughing, and showing a
3 I | Presles? he is such a kind man," thought Pierrotin, struck~
4 I | mystery.~ ~"He's a worthy man, Monsieur Moreau," remarked
5 I | from the steward. "He is a man~who makes others work, but
6 I | land--for his master. Honest man! He often~comes to Paris
7 I | seventeen years, and the man ought to have~made something
8 I | Monsieur le comte is a good man," said the footman, confidentially.~"
9 I | for he's a truly good~man, a kind man, a king of men,
10 I | a truly good~man, a kind man, a king of men, hey!"~ ~"
11 I | bit of good advice. Every~man for himself in this world.
12 I | the effect,~coming from a man who stood as high as second
13 II | the courts of Europe. No~man was less obvious, or more
14 II | success were indifferent to a man of~this stamp; but no one,
15 II | advantages very necessary to a man~who attempts to struggle
16 II | count wanted a~trustworthy man at Presles, for his wife
17 II | Code he remained an~honest man, and no proof could have
18 II | Moreau."~ ~Being a prudent man, Moreau invested yearly,
19 II | and he played the poor man so successfully with the
20 II | who is not an intriguing man, far from it, is a captain
21 III | Argent the lady and the~young man in whom his perspicacity
22 III | scarcely call hair. This man, of wan complexion, seemed
23 III | dishonest. It is possible for a man to cheat his~master to his
24 III | variety, or by chance, every man~has his moment of beneficence;
25 III | Goodness, as the most surly man~sacrifices to the Graces
26 III | Napoleon ruined in 1802. This man, named Husson,~became insane
27 III | was said to be a rising man. At that~period of our history,
28 III | that of the woman for the man she had saved in 1797,~now
29 III | travelling?" asked one young man~of the other.~ ~"Yes, my
30 III | step-father) as~that envied young man seemed at ease in his.~ ~"
31 III | thought Oscar.~ ~The young man turned round. What were
32 III | From that moment the young man assumed, in Oscar's eyes,
33 III | negligent elegance. The young man exhibited, offensively,~
34 III | passionate desire to appear a man. Then the young~fellow swells
35 III | moved to envy by a~young man of twenty-two in a frogged
36 III | by the arrival of a young man~accompanied by a true "gamin,"
37 III | dragging a~hand-cart. The young man came up to Pierrotin and
38 III | called to his~own porter. The man ran out and helped to unload
39 III | value, this child, made man by Art or~by vocation, seemed
40 III | a slight and pale young man, with extremely thick black~
41 III | if this noticeable~young man suffered from some chronic
42 III | Hey! my friend; when a man is blessed with such wheels
43 III | porter~returned with a stout man in tow, whose weight could
44 III | The hollow-cheeked young man and his page reappeared.~ ~"
45 III | be made to move for the man who comes~last? We all have
46 III | be a rabbit, august old man," he said to the count.~ ~"
47 IV | discussion. When a young man of twenty-two, like the
48 IV | chandler; in the shabby young man accompanied by~Mistigris,
49 IV | thank you! Besides, what man of any~breeding would wear
50 IV | said the count.~ ~"What a man he was, wasn't he?" cried
51 IV | he?" cried Georges.~ ~"A man to whom I owe many obligations,"
52 IV | wide open.~ ~"Yes, young man, I did the campaign of 1815.
53 IV | conclusion of the young man's speech.~ ~"--I am only
54 IV | Oscar, anxious to play the man, swallowed the second glass
55 IV | are heavy; they take all a man has, and leave him the~rest.
56 IV | with a credulous air, "a man must love a woman~well to
57 IV | to those who love it; a man must have a passion for~
58 IV | of being so stiff with a man in~business these eight
59 IV | as a~Dalmatian'; and my man was worse than A Dalmatian,
60 IV | delightful ogles fit to raise a man to the summit of Paradise
61 V | escape them.~ ~"There, young man," said the great painter.~ ~"
62 V | painter.~ ~"Here, young man, here's another way; watch
63 V | said in a low voice as the man passed~him, "I promised
64 V | Schinner? the little young man there seems to have found
65 V | being called a "little young man," remarked, as the~other
66 V | rapin.~ ~"Your family, young man, destine you to some career,
67 V | Though~it seems to me, young man, that your respectable mother
68 V | ourselves who say 'home.' For a man so~covered with decorations--"~ ~"'
69 V | delighted to meet with a~young man who can tell me about that
70 V | resumed Oscar. "The poor man is so shrivelled and~old
71 V | cried the painter; "no man should blaguer women."~ ~"
72 V | Husson."~ ~"Who is that man?" inquired Pere Leger of
73 V | and I, being a married man, dare not invite~you to
74 VI | fifty years old, was a dark man of medium~height, and seemed
75 VI | them. It is difficult~for a man not to be kind and hospitable
76 VI | so fresh, so charming! A man without any~talent might
77 VI | detection, and gave it~to the man as soon as he saw him in
78 VI | gates. However worn-out a man may be by the~wear and tear
79 VI | disappointments, the soul of any man able to love deeply at the~
80 VI | stroke that the usually calm man staggered~through his park
81 VI | altercation with a handsome~young man.~ ~"Monsieur le comte particularly
82 VI | the politeness of~a young man he'd have come as a rabbit."~ ~"
83 VI | possibly, to impress the good man's mind with a prestige of
84 VI | what would you do with a man whom you trusted, if, after~
85 VI | unpardonable. To injure a man's interest, why, that is
86 VI | Monsieur de Reybert, a man of fifty,~with a crabbed
87 VI | State, a gentleman, an old man, and a client," said the~
88 VI | injected blood.~ ~"This young man is a mere lump of vanity,"
89 VI | Oscar's excuses. "A proud man humiliates himself~because
90 VII | seventeen years of the life of a man like myself is worth.~Owning
91 VII | you all. You never saw a man so changed in a~single day."~ ~"
92 VII | four careers for a~young man like you,--commerce, government
93 VII | place of capital, a young man can~only give devotion and
94 VII | extraordinary help, by which a young man makes his way~promptly either
95 VII | fourth~share. Thus the worthy man, who was now nearly seventy
96 VII | francs apiece on the~old man's death. These two women
97 VII | last six~years,--the old man being perfectly contented
98 VII | Camusot approved~of the old man's ethics, and thought that,
99 VII | fair lady," said the old man, bowing to Madame Clapart,
100 VII | exclaimed the little old man, stopping short.~Madame
101 VII | mother, interrupting the old man, who,~out of courtesy to
102 VII | my own fault; I~married a man whose incapacity is almost
103 VII | madame," said the little old man, "and don't weep; it~is
104 VII | death," continued the old man. "I have divided among them
105 VII | honesty, and work, young man, and~you'll succeed. There'
106 VII | one's~fortune; and if a man keeps his teeth he eats
107 VII | destiny," said the little old man,~observing Oscar's apathetic
108 VII | breakfast," replied the kind old man, leading Oscar by~the ear.~ ~
109 VII | without~clients. He is a young man, hard as an iron bar, eager
110 VII | boy ever means to become a man~it can only be under a discipline
111 VIII| price.~ ~Desroches, a young man twenty-six years of age,
112 VIII| aspect~of this gaunt young man, with a muddy skin and hair
113 VIII| such poverty as that, a man's a~man. For the slightest
114 VIII| poverty as that, a man's a~man. For the slightest fault
115 VIII| what you want. Ha! when a man~starts from nothing to reach
116 VIII| he~now seemed a sensible man, he showed, from time to
117 VIII| school. He was a~fine young man of twenty-three, enriched
118 VIII| refused to a rich young man. To see himself, by~the
119 VIII| especially, a good fellow. May a man~who treats so well be soon
120 VIII| minutes later a handsome young man, with a fine figure and~
121 IX | at two o'clock, a young man entered the office,~whom
122 IX | cried the office like one man. "Bravo! very well! vivat!~
123 IX | Godichon"? So the little old man remained~under a yoke that
124 IX | point of having some~young man who will take her to drive,
125 IX | the clerks of~Desroches) a man must be stupid who begins
126 IX | training for it.~ ~A young man as handsome and attractive
127 IX | second clerk is already a man of weight, and shouldn't~
128 IX | to get that~judgment. A man is not forbidden to amuse
129 IX | bank.~ ~"Come, my little man, take 'em up," cried Fanny
130 X | those of the little old man; and~when she recognized
131 X | dishonored,--the son of the man to whom you owe your~fortune?--
132 X | without reward. The sick man tormented the poor~creature,
133 X | teasing a half-imbecile man, whom poverty had rendered
134 X | marquise?~Pooh! A young man who has senses and a taste
135 X | door. The luckless young man came up at once.~ ~"Ah!
136 X | youth, transformed into a man. "You~worry my poor mother
137 X | inward fury of the young man,~who had just received a
138 X | imbecile mind of the sick man.~ ~"A momentary temptation,
139 X | this time. You are not a~man who can begin a new career
140 X | where, as we know, the young man died of his~wounds.~ ~The
141 X | separated her son from the man who had~shown him such devotion.
142 XI | leaning on the arm of a man about thirty-four years
143 XI | Oscar, eyeing~them like a man who is trying to recall
144 XI | proportions of the ex-~young man. Now almost ignoble in appearance
145 XI | to retain. Dressed like a man who is careless of his~clothes,
146 XI | symptoms, the poverty of a man~who was totally unable to
147 XI | Oscar, in his own mind,--"a man I left in~possession of
148 XI | 1797.~ ~An enormous old man, very simply dressed, though
149 XI | bad help~to him."~ ~An old man of seventy here came out
150 XI | waiting now for~your great man."~ ~"Here he comes," said
151 XI | Marest," said the fallen man, in a low voice.~ ~The clerk
152 XI | beside his driver, a young man in~a blouse, who called
153 XI | Bridau, "and the little young man who was stupid enough to~
154 XI | Ha! the famous Centre man; Moreau de l'Oise?" cried
155 XI | Oscar is a commonplace man, gentle, without assumption,
156 XI | Life~The Firm of Nucingen~A Man of Business~The Middle Classes~ ~
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