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| Alphabetical [« »] honor 11 honorable 3 honore 1 hope 41 hoped 7 hopeful 1 hopeless 1 | Frequency [« »] 41 believe 41 doubt 41 feet 41 hope 41 paris 41 reached 40 because | Émile Gaboriau Monsieur Lecoq IntraText - Concordances hope |
Chapter
1 III | doubt, faith, anxiety, and hope—filled Father Absinthe’s 2 IV | he take? For he could not hope to follow both. Seated upon 3 IV | hurried in pursuit, could I hope to overtake and capture 4 VI | crime. Certainly, they might hope with the powerful means 5 VII | him to a standstill. “I hope this man has had no communication 6 VII | hoarse, discordant voice.~“I hope so, I am sure—but that is 7 VIII | to eat or drink. Anxiety, hope, and even fatigue itself, 8 VIII | high-sounding phrases, in the hope of gaining promotion. I’ 9 VIII | highway. Hence, the driver’s hope of finding them in the Rue 10 IX | true she might reasonably hope, that the magistrate had 11 X | I feel very well.”~“I hope,” continued the magistrate, 12 X | You are too reasonable, I hope,” he said, at last, “to 13 XI | you are lost. There’s no hope for you.”~The prisoner’s 14 XII | succumbs—he is mine!”~But all hope of immediate success vanished 15 XIII | interrupted the governor; “and I hope before the end of the next 16 XIV | than ever inflamed with hope and courage.~Unfortunately, 17 XV | who had staked his last hope with his last louis, and 18 XV | s daughter-in-law; and I hope we shall be able to obtain 19 XV | scented danger. Hence, we may hope. Now let us get back and 20 XVI | terrified that there is no hope of making her speak.”~Lecoq’ 21 XVII | And of course you don’t hope for a sou by way of reward—”~“ 22 XVIII| In that case there is no hope of my ever leaving this 23 XVIII| the magistrate; “do you hope to find the key to this 24 XVIII| waiting your orders to act. Hope! Courage!”~ 25 XIX | mystery; and the ray of hope that had sparkled for an 26 XIX | circumstances there’s no hope for me. When the police 27 XIX | consent to it when they hope to derive some important 28 XIX | far from the perfection I hope to arrive at; though I may 29 XIX | objection rather in the hope of its being overruled, 30 XIX | no never, had he dared to hope for such assistance. Ah! 31 XIX | tortures for a while in the hope of solving the problem. 32 XIX | dozen criminals in the mere hope of injuring me, jealous 33 XX | had conceived any serious hope of success: and only one 34 XX | plank which was his only hope of salvation snatched from 35 XXI | breathless, and Lecoq had little hope of seeing him again, since 36 XXI | Absinthe.~“Ah! I dared not hope it! I shall have a good 37 XXI | committing a robbery, but in the hope of throwing his pursuers 38 XXII | and yet unextinguished hope of revenge: while poor Father 39 XXII | police had abandoned all hope of solving the mystery, 40 XXII | Lecoq was trying to gain hope and courage by reflecting 41 XXIV | comes to his lips—a smile of hope; for he thinks, since M.