Paragraph
1 I | drove the~four-wheeler. This may seem extraordinary in these
2 II | which the count, if we may judge by the~valet's statements
3 II | Reybert in conclusion, "may~have judged me unfavorably
4 III | moment of beneficence; he may call it his error, he may
5 III | may call it his error, he may never~do it again, but he
6 III | him beyond all measure. It~may also have been that his
7 III | no matter how much they may~ask you," continued Madame
8 III | the persons with whom you may be~thrown; and there is
9 III | standing in a draught, and you may take~cold. Besides, I am
10 III | know how shockingly old you may be yourself~some day. 'Travel
11 IV | gendarmes in that country. You may go from end to end of~Egypt,
12 IV | Schinner."~ ~"Hey! bourgeois, may I offer you a glass of Alicante
13 IV | Leger.~ ~"Ha! that's it! you may well ask that! Those fellows
14 IV | consequently, his name is, as I may say, graven on my~heart--"~ ~"
15 IV | culture--"~ ~"Well, there may be something of that sort,"
16 IV | a mere decorator. I'm on may way to a~chateau where I
17 IV | and I cried: 'The monster may kill me, but I'll go, I'
18 IV | know--and I hope you~never may know--what it is to be taken
19 V | is only a scheme; Moreau may not~have listened to it."~ ~
20 V | a young diplomatist who may some day recover~Belgium
21 V | better than that."~ ~"I may not know proverbs, but I
22 VI | handsome women."~ ~"What may you mean by such language?"~ ~"
23 VI | coucou was the count. You may well say: 'Sour are the~
24 VI | coming in a confusion that may readily be imagined. The~
25 VI | However worn-out a man may be by the~wear and tear
26 VI | said Georges Marest, "I may have amused myself with
27 VI | left the room.~ ~"Yes, HE may be, but my master isn't,"
28 VII | distress of mind which you may perhaps~imagine, though
29 VII | myself to a fortune which may some day~make me the equal
30 VII | replied Madame Clapart.~ ~"She may have forgotten it."~ ~"What
31 VII | should live at our~ease, we may owe it all to him; he has
32 VII | however deeply the first may have been cut in. For this~
33 VII | good-humor.~ ~"Monsieur Moreau may die," she said. "And besides,
34 VII | God grant that you may live thirty years longer
35 VII | Oscar behaves himself, we may, perhaps, employ him."~ ~"
36 VII | poor boy's heedlessness~may prove to be the cause of
37 VII | solicitor, or barrister, as he may elect."~ ~"Come, Oscar;
38 VIII| your own free will, that it may~not be said that Monsieur
39 VIII| ties, and~surprised, as one may say, to find themselves
40 VIII| Long life to Maitre Bordin! May God shed~favors on his venerable
41 VIII| favors on his venerable pow! May he sell dear so glorious
42 VIII| so glorious a~practice! May the rich clients for whom
43 VIII| for whom he prays arrive! May his~bills of costs and charges
44 VIII| charges be paid in a trice! May our masters to~come be like
45 VIII| masters to~come be like him! May he ever be loved by clerks
46 VIII| by the help of~which we may go back to the year 1525,
47 VIII| especially, a good fellow. May a man~who treats so well
48 VIII| put upon~these records, we may here give the report of
49 IX | However~disinterested she may be, the courtship of such
50 IX | has a friend like you; you may rely upon a~gratitude which
51 IX | displeasing to us. Whatever may be his rank~or the degree
52 IX | five hundred, so that you may be sure of your master's~
53 X | have had any. God grant he may know how to control his~
54 X | to eat in our old age we may owe it~all to that dear
55 X | sheer vanity. Well, vanity may inspire~fine deeds in war
56 X | inspire~fine deeds in war and may advance him in the career
57 X | it without fortune."~ ~"I may get a lucky number," said
58 XI | morning in the month of May, under the~porte-cochere
59 XI | has recently left that he may die in peace."~ ~"And the
|