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| Alphabetical [« »] making 15 malignant 1 mamma 7 man 119 man- 2 man-servant 1 manage 3 | Frequency [« »] 129 watteville 128 your 123 no 119 man 119 when 115 are 110 if | Honoré de Balzac Albert Savarus IntraText - Concordances man |
Chapter
1 I | Watteville, a dry, lean man devoid of~intelligence, 2 I | said a handsome young man sitting near the~Baroness, 3 I | for from Paris. This young man is wonderful, the bigwigs 4 II | Soulas is perhaps the only man in~Besancon descended from 5 II | allowed of his lodging,~like a man uncertain of the future, 6 II | extravagant, whereas the poor man made the two ends meet in 7 II | knew how great a tax on a~man's capital were six francs 8 II | frivolous advantages, which a man can buy for fifteen louis, 9 II | circulation by~pronouncing him "A man of advanced ideas." Amedee 10 II | 1834 Amedee was a young man of five-and-twenty, of medium 11 II | looked upon as the finest man in Besancon.~A hairdresser 12 III | 1834 Amedee was the only man in Besancon who wore trouser-straps;~ 13 III | will account for the young man's being regarded as a lion. 14 III | Paris sent them a young man,~knowing nothing about la 15 III | visited the Comte a young man who bore some likeness to 16 III | finest and best-dressed man there, in order to win first 17 III | forbidden to her~senses. A man who is so privileged as 18 III | is in her eyes a charming man. If this~exemplary youth 19 III | the most charming young~man in the town; no one would 20 IV | Soulas. When~this young man was in the house, she alternately 21 IV | He is a Frenchman, and no man's son," replied Amedee de 22 IV | satisfied to say, 'Here is a man who does not know his Besancon. 23 V | Savaron procured the poor man's acquittal by proving his~ 24 V | picture my advocate~as a young man. But this singular setting 25 V | meditations stamp on a great man's brow; an olive~complexion 26 V | Jerome informed me; the man did not go in, but merely~ 27 V | certainly is no ordinary man. There is more than one 28 V | Why did so eloquent a man leave Paris? For what purpose 29 V | Bar, I believe that this man, who may be five-and-thirty, 30 VI | looking at the head of every~man seated at the table; "I 31 VI | seen this extraordinary man, though at a distance, the 32 VI | at a distance, the only man~whose countenance stood 33 VI | pleasure the poor unoccupied man derived from~this scheme, 34 VII | came into church.~ ~The man must have been atrociously 35 VII | solemn demeanor,~as of a man who bears a world on his 36 VII | young Monsieur de Soulas. "A man has~been sent for from Paris 37 VII | Boucher's eldest~son, a young man of two-and-twenty, very 38 VII | adherent. Alfred was the only man in Besancon with whom the 39 VII | capital out of the great man. To Alfred, Albert was a 40 VII | To Alfred, Albert was a man of~genius, of profound politics. 41 VIII | was~the natural son of a man of rank, who was carried 42 VIII | charming Parisian woman, and a man of~mark, a nobleman of Brabant, 43 IX | a year. Old Lovelace, a man of~ninety, and much broken, 44 IX | years old; she was the old man's youngest~child, and the 45 IX | was a simpleton, like any man of~spirit and imagination 46 X | for him than for any other~man, were known, and secured 47 X | about eight o'clock the old man left the young people without 48 XI | consent to that poor old man, I might take~advantage 49 XI | that enough to make a young~man guard himself against every 50 XI | all in all on earth to~the man she loves; to find him lonely, 51 XII | to religious sentiment; man is~always certain of being 52 XII | second birth? And a young man mingles with this love a 53 XII | as she perceived a young~man. She stood up, and remained 54 XII | dialect unfamiliar to a man who hardly knew even the 55 XII | had produced in the~old man. He now saw a man of about 56 XII | the~old man. He now saw a man of about sixty, extremely 57 XII | false smile under which a man of good breeding hides~his 58 XII | wife had not received a man's education--an~unheard-of 59 XII | the watchful~silence of a man who has been duped.~ ~"/ 60 XII | Your husband is a young man," he whispered in her ear.~ ~ 61 XIII | peace of mind of that dear~man, as simple as a child, and 62 XIII | carried away by it. The old man certainly~behaved to her 63 XIII | you had," replied the old man~gravely.~ ~"After all, is 64 XIII | speak to him."~ ~The old man went into the drawing-room 65 XIII | be the glory of that old man, who is, after~all, my only 66 XIII | as I know," replied the man. "Prince and Princess Colonna~ 67 XIII | such a moment~enslaves a man for life! A faint smile, 68 XIII | Gandolphini for that of a man who is a nobody? I want~ 69 XIII | that politics soon make a man old."~ ~One of the rarest 70 XIV | the boatman was a young man dressed like a~sailor, and 71 XIV | daring attempts of a young man gifted with fine qualities, 72 XIV | master-~hand, at any rate by a man who seemed to give his own 73 XVI | not know much about it, a man of wealth and~ambition, 74 XVI | accept as her~husband a man who had stooped so low?' 75 XVI | I did my utmost for the man, and my~success was absolute 76 XVI | night. The Vicar-General, a~man of parts, and very influential, 77 XVII | the appearance of a strong man of good health, I feel myself 78 XVII | centered in an~exceptional man, it is mingled with the 79 XVII | can become one. The worthy man wanted to~show his gratitude 80 XVIII | a star set too~high for man to reach it.~ ~ ~"27th.~ ~" 81 XIX | give up everything to a man who loved me so.--To be 82 XIX | are really a remarkable man," said the Abbe de Grancey, 83 XIX | But this ferocious old~man was so widely dreaded, that 84 XX | village in his~hands. The man who won the case for the 85 XX | Appeals, that you are a man of the~Restoration!"~ ~" 86 XX | everything an~ambitious man can wish--who knows? A Minister 87 XX | knows? A Minister perhaps. A man can~always be a Minister 88 XX | That is even worse when a man cares about it as you seem 89 XX | liking, any more~than a wise man counts on a dead man's shoes 90 XX | wise man counts on a dead man's shoes before starting 91 XXI | yet in the presence of the man~she had this instant begun 92 XXI | to the Moderates the best~man to choose; they preferred 93 XXI | The Prefet was a capable man, a personal enemy of the~ 94 XXI | three months yet. When a man's whole life depends on 95 XXI | Granet, the influential man to~whom Savarus had done 96 XXI | regarded as bigwigs. Each man represented on an average~ 97 XXI | priest, touched by the~young man's entreaties, had been willing 98 XXI | Under~such circumstances, a man may temporize, may make 99 XXI | looked at the ambitious man, whose face at~that moment 100 XXI | Deputies, when an ambitious man~stakes all to win all, or, 101 XXII | revealing himself as a new~man since his arrival at Besancon, 102 XXII | was, according to the only man present who was~capable 103 XXII | electors.~Never had any man had such a triumph. But, 104 XXII | the~hands of an ambitious man. Each day was a check for 105 XXII | being an uncompromising man of the~Right, a second Berryer. 106 XXII | his head fall on the old man's shoulder. He was a~child 107 XXII | of those moments when the~man vanishes, for you are not 108 XXIII | In me you have a son, a~man who will owe his happiness 109 XXIV | your~master?" she asked the man, who came to the foot of 110 XXIV | another Vicar-General,~a man of about forty, who hoped 111 XXVI | Rouxey."~ ~"You are a queer man with your daughter! It does 112 XXVI | helping to kill the poor man.~ ~This death, which would 113 XXVI | to the care of the dying man. Thus, while Albert was~ 114 XXVII | I will write to the only man who can know anything of 115 XXVII | restore this unfortunate man to his innocence~in the 116 XXVIII| temptation to~rehabilitate the man of the world, the friar 117 XXVIII| old Civil List. A young man, prompted by~Rosalie, pointed 118 XXVIII| too! She drove a clever man into a monastery--the Grand 119 XXVIII| the Grand Chartreuse--a~man of immense capabilities,