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| Alphabetical [« »] ogre 1 oh 29 oime 2 old 66 older 1 oldest 1 olive 2 | Frequency [« »] 68 made 68 young 67 them 66 old 65 mother 64 love 64 should | Honoré de Balzac Albert Savarus IntraText - Concordances old |
Chapter
1 I | escutcheon of pretence on the old shield of the Rupts. The~ 2 I | la Prefecture in the fine old mansion of the Rupts, with 3 I | all in harmony with the old liveries and the old servants. 4 I | the old liveries and the old servants. Though~served 5 I | of the~buildings of the old convent remains with the 6 III | that distinguishes~those old families! It was very generally 7 III | through the sieve of an old Jesuit? Dancing~and music 8 IV | He took as his~servant old Monsieur Galard's man--Galard 9 V | room next the ante-room--old Galard's drawing-room--which~ 10 V | he has had painted like old oak, and which I found entirely 11 V | shelves also painted as old oak. The painting~and the 12 V | furniture~consists of an old writing table of carved 13 V | table of carved wood, six old armchairs~covered with tapestry, 14 VI | face of the~splendor of the old counts of Rupt. Amedee had 15 IX | Loveless/) is that of an old English family, but Richardson 16 IX | two hundred francs a year. Old Lovelace, a man of~ninety, 17 IX | said to be nineteen years old; she was the old man's youngest~ 18 IX | nineteen years old; she was the old man's youngest~child, and 19 IX | carefully to gratify the old gardeners of the~Borromean 20 IX | but~with much caution; the old couple treated him with 21 IX | not see anybody," said the old~gardener.~ ~Rodolphe bit 22 X | lodged with the Bergmanns the old Italian admitted a stranger 23 X | about eight o'clock the old man left the young people 24 X | indiscreet in asking how old you are, cara Francesca?" 25 XI | my consent to that poor old man, I might take~advantage 26 XII | news had produced in the~old man. He now saw a man of 27 XIII | carried away by it. The old man certainly~behaved to 28 XIII | if you had," replied the old man~gravely.~ ~"After all, 29 XIII | to speak to him."~ ~The old man went into the drawing-room 30 XIII | to be the glory of that old man, who is, after~all, 31 XIII | you like, a Sicilian, an~old adherent of King Murat's, 32 XIII | dressed, by the side of an old lady as hard as a cameo. 33 XIII | politics soon make a man old."~ ~One of the rarest gifts 34 XIII | led~in the castle of the old Colonnas.~ ~This rich heiress 35 XV | and who, like every ugly old maid,~was far more exacting 36 XVII | Yes, as you tell me, I was old when I came to Besancon, 37 XIX | but few,~were regarded as old women. No one talked of 38 XIX | to a sort of factotum, an old servant of the~Wattevilles 39 XIX | Watteville, who in his active old age was~passionately attached 40 XIX | Vilard. But this ferocious old~man was so widely dreaded, 41 XIX | maintained the usurpation. The old assassin, the old renegade, 42 XIX | usurpation. The old assassin, the old renegade, the old~Abbe Watteville, 43 XIX | assassin, the old renegade, the old~Abbe Watteville, ended his 44 XX | end by saying, what the~old men in the village say, 45 XX | visit the day before. The old~priest had come to win over 46 XX | her intelligence. She is old, too; she is~past thirty; 47 XXI | the representative of an old parliamentary~family; his 48 XXI | Chavoncourts, on whom an old aunt was to settle an estate 49 XXI | gentle, calm voice which old priests acquire.~ ~"Betrayed!" 50 XXII | father-in-law and a very shrewd old~merchant to whom Monsieur 51 XXII | letting his head fall on the old man's shoulder. He was a~ 52 XXIII | Watteville will get the old ones. As to my~electors, 53 XXIII | her father,~because her old aunt is to settle something 54 XXIV | After seeing out the old priest, Albert went to bed 55 XXIV | to return," said he to an old statesman of~seventy, "what 56 XXV | life.~ ~"Mademoiselle, an old gentleman from Paris arrived 57 XXV | impossible to tell what~the old gentleman and the lawyer 58 XXV | above an hour, and then the old gentleman, with the lawyer,~ 59 XXV | painting on~canvas. The old gentleman had in his hand 60 XXV | pitied. But he treated the old gentleman so~respectfully 61 XXV | Gentillet, who sold him the old traveling carriage that 62 XXV | Hotel National?"~ ~"As the old gentleman did not mean to 63 XXVI | which she showed~to the old priest made him shudder-- 64 XXVII | admonish you," said the old priest,~with deep grief. " 65 XXVII | calm. I understand now that old Prince Soderini, the~father 66 XXVIII| of~the pensioners on the old Civil List. A young man,