| Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library | ||
| Alphabetical [« »] forthwith 1 fortnight 1 fortnightly 1 fortune 26 fortunes 1 forty 7 forty-eight 1 | Frequency [« »] 26 evening 26 few 26 fine 26 fortune 26 jerome 26 just 26 princess | Honoré de Balzac Albert Savarus IntraText - Concordances fortune |
Chapter
1 I | Madame de Watteville's fortune was a fine one; while her~ 2 III | her enormous prospective fortune~at that time lent considerable 3 VIII | that might help to make his fortune, while saving, by~strict 4 X | your father, whatever your~fortune may be. So beautiful as 5 X | passing fancy. I have my fortune to make;~you must have a 6 XI | attitude. "Make a splendid fortune, be one of~the remarkable 7 XI | superior character and a fine~fortune. All these observations 8 XIII | generosity he risked his life and fortune because I was a Liberal! 9 XIV | First he longed to make his fortune, and risked his all in an~ 10 XIV | began again to construct his fortune. His talents were~already 11 XV | give up the pursuit of a~fortune after the loss of three 12 XV | thousand francs for my whole~fortune, without the smallest fame, 13 XVII | the last remains of his~fortune in his pocket, bent on staking 14 XVII | runner of antiquity! To see~fortune and death stand on the threshold 15 XVIII | run after power, a name, fortune! But at Belgirate~there 16 XX | Watteville had three times her~fortune, and adored me into the 17 XX | undone. Do not~stake your fortune and your prospects on a 18 XXI | parliamentary~family; his fortune, of about fifteen thousand 19 XXIII | as~deputy as a sufficient fortune.~ ~"You will have a struggle 20 XXIII | deputy, I have somebody's fortune to make, and by making it 21 XXVI | Florence gay. The Duchess' fortune is one of the finest~in 22 XXVII | Besides, you have no great fortune to~give him. Your mother 23 XXVII | reduce your share of her fortune as~much as possible. You 24 XXVIII| Soulas and settle~all her own fortune on him.~ ~"Let us each be 25 XXVIII| de Watteville was still a fortune to~marry, of eighteen hundred 26 XXVIII| aged a good deal.~ ~"My fortune has cost me dear," said