| Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library | ||
| Alphabetical [« »] reaches 1 reaching 7 reactionists 1 read 35 readily 2 reading 6 reads 1 | Frequency [« »] 35 lips 35 lost 35 presence 35 read 35 something 34 attention 34 ever | Émile Gaboriau Monsieur Lecoq IntraText - Concordances read |
Chapter
1 II | that his companions might read his hopes and plans in the 2 III | chiromancer professing to read the future in the hand of 3 III | are the facts as I have read them,” pursued Lecoq. “When 4 III | he had not known how to read, which had been speechless 5 V | he did not wish them to read in his eyes how perfectly 6 V | reading of his report. He read it rapidly, refraining as 7 VI | commissary unfolded it and read the contents aloud:~“My 8 VI | proces-verbal, he began to read the report prepared by Lecoq.~ 9 VI | young police agent tried to read upon the magistrate’s impassive 10 VII | registrar took the documents and read them. “Oh!” he exclaimed, “ 11 VIII | tore open the envelope and read: “Monsieur Lecoq—”~“Monsieur?” 12 IX | Rue de Bourgogne, and then read the letter he had received 13 IX | by having your evidence read. Goguet, read the passage, 14 IX | your evidence read. Goguet, read the passage, if you please.”~ 15 IX | in his clearest voice, he read these words, taken down 16 IX | word. Her deposition was read over to her, she signed 17 X | regards that fellow Gustave—I read it in her eyes. I am also 18 X | magistrate broke the seal, and read aloud, as follows:~“I feel 19 XI | find it.”~The clerk at once read the passage referred to, 20 XII | sadly. “The clerk will now read the minutes of your examination— 21 XII | examination—listen.”~While Goguet read the evidence aloud, the 22 XVI | him?~The magistrate, who read this thought in Polyte’s 23 XVI | clerk: “Goguet,” said he, “read the last remark you took 24 XVIII| denials, one could always read in their eyes an unshaken 25 XVIII| from their seats. They both read important intelligence in 26 XVIII| from the magistrate and read the numbers inscribed upon 27 XVIII| cipher which can not be read with a little skill and 28 XVIII| with gratified vanity, he read the entire note aloud. It 29 XIX | When completed, his note read as follows: “I have told 30 XIX | plainly, then, he hasn’t read the letter.”~M. Segmuller 31 XX | disappointment could be read in his countenance, which 32 XX | dejection and one could read his indecision in his eyes. 33 XXV | friend Gevrol, you must read, and make yourself familiar 34 XXV | voice that the sick man then read: “Escorval (Louis-Guillaume, 35 XXV | leaf, he recommenced to read: “Sairmeuse (Anne-Marie-Victor