Chapter
1 I | His eldest son, Pierre, a man of thirty, with black whiskers
2 I | was rough with her, as a man who is the despot of his
3 I | Is it necessary that a man should be in love because
4 I | Marechal is deceased.”~Both man and wife responded with
5 I | best friend; and the old man himself had suddenly forgotten
6 I | indispensable.”~The old man was beside himself with
7 I | be formed. But the young man insisted, declaring that
8 II | him, as we question a sick man to discover the cause of
9 II | stronger; the sensitive man always had the upper hand
10 II | hand over the intellectual man. So he tried to discover
11 II | emotions against which a man struggles in vain.~He fell
12 II | the instinctive element in man, and giving rise to a current
13 II | those which the thinking man desires, aims at, and regards
14 II | just the woman to disgust a man with good sense and good
15 II | few steps beyond, he saw a man sitting at the very end
16 II | sage—a happy or a desperate man? Who was it? He went forward,
17 II | old boy, you are a rich man. I am very glad to have
18 II | out and crossed, an old man, quite bald, with a large
19 II | shabby old cassock; and the man spoke with a strong Polish
20 II | these names.~Then the old man had an idea:~“What you said
21 II | family?~But the cautious old man would not explain further.~“
22 III | explaining that he was a medical man and had many visitors. He
23 III | your studies, and because a man ought never to sit idle.”~
24 III | intellectual worth of a man. To a man of inferior mind
25 III | intellectual worth of a man. To a man of inferior mind it was
26 III | in the hands of a strong man it was a powerful lever.
27 III | Jean were a really superior man, now that he could never
28 III | him how hard it was for a man of past thirty to be reduced
29 III | breathed on his soul. A man is not so lost when he is
30 III | morning with a handsome fair man, wearing a big beard. Is
31 III | indeed; and he looks like a man who enjoys life, too.”~What
32 III | Beausire, a funny little man who had become quite round
33 III | announced, and as the old man was about to offer his arm
34 III | which always threatens a man of your build.”~The jeweller’
35 III | captain, you are a stronger man than my father; and in the
36 III | intimate with him.”~The old man, emotional with drink, began
37 IV | at sea.”~“Well, then, old man, off we go!”~They hoisted
38 IV | respect, and shows them that a man who lives in such good style
39 IV | first come to know this man Marechal?”~Old Roland looked
40 IV | was in fifty-eight, old man. Pierre was three years
41 IV | moment, he felt sure, the old man was thinking: “You ought
42 IV | Jean, his brother, was that man’s son.~No. He did not believe
43 IV | know him, to penetrate the man whom he had seen pass by
44 IV | him as he had known him: a man of about sixty, with a white
45 IV | gestures, tones, looks, of this man who had vanished from the
46 IV | nothing remarkable in the man’s mind, but much that was
47 IV | never repaid. Then this man must always have been fond
48 IV | Then in an undertone, as a man speaks in a nightmare, he
49 IV | image, his face as an old man, blotted out all others.
50 IV | the gentleman, the rich man, the customer, to the humble
51 IV | with the wife? He was a man of education and fairly
52 IV | the second child! Why?~The man had all his wits; he must
53 IV | His father!—A very worthy man, no doubt, upright and honest
54 IV | soul, could have accepted a man so unlike herself as a suitor
55 IV | evening. And then, one day a man had come in, as lovers do
56 IV | mother. What then? Must a man be blind and stupid to the
57 IV | him? Why yes, since this man had had no other love, since
58 IV | father, his brother, the dead man, his mother!~He hurried
59 IV | the voice of the look-out man, the hoarse voice of an
60 V | presentiment, no suspicions! A man who had known their mother
61 V | hardly to recognise the man to whose kisses they have
62 V | heard another snore, an old man’s snore, short, laboured,
63 V | embrace. To him, a medical man, so little would suffice
64 V | wonderfully like the fair young man who smiled from the picture-frame.~
65 V | bewitching, and deluding some man. They had dressed themselves
66 V | mind. That flabby, burly man, happy and besotted, was
67 V | hand, the hand of a dead man, had torn asunder and broken,
68 V | his father, that coarse man whom he could not love in
69 V | with the jealous wrath of a man who, after long being blind,
70 V | his father.~The love of man and wife is a voluntary
71 V | flies! He was a good-looking man, too, in those days, and
72 V | take your oath that that man was a good and faithful
73 V | should see the miniature of a man she did not know, she might
74 V | say,” replied Jean. “But a man does not treat his family
75 VI | burden of life.”~The old man did not have a notion what
76 VI | strange tone about it, the old man made no further inquiries,
77 VI | no hurry, as he is a rich man.”~She shook her head without
78 VI | just look at her. Really, a man might die under his very
79 VI | learning. Learning how a man lays himself out to be cozened
80 VI | observed upon the beach a man lying flat at full length
81 VII | then said: “No, dear old man; go to bed. Pierre will
82 VII | does not do to accept one man’s fortune when another is
83 VII | that you are the son of the man who left you his fortune.
84 VII | fortune. Well, then— a decent man does not take the money
85 VII | he found himself like a man who has fallen into the
86 VII | merciful judge; he was a man full of weakness and a son
87 VII | and never loved any other man; that he was my life, my
88 VIII| morality. Besides, he was not a man made for resistance. He
89 VIII| to him. Would an honest man keep it?~“No,” was the first
90 VIII| and work like any other man, like any other beginner.
91 VIII| question: “Since I am this man’s son, since I know and
92 VIII| I am not the son of the man I always believed to be
93 VIII| felt his fingers in the old man’s fatherly clasp, a strange,
94 VIII| will go.”~And the young man went. He mounted the stairs
95 VIII| fevered determination of a man who is about to fight a
96 VIII| to get a place as medical man on board a Transatlantic
97 VIII| been, married to another man!”~She was visiting it on
98 VIII| He was thinking of the man he had hitherto believed
99 VIII| find that he was another man’s son; and if, after the
100 VIII| of these days.”~The young man interrupted her:~“Before
101 VIII| of course, for the good man counted for so little.~When
102 IX | first feeling was that of a man condemned to death who is
103 IX | little state-room by a young man with a fair beard, not unlike
104 IX | waves, the very flesh of the man, who had always slept in
105 IX | mother had yielded to a man’s caresses.~He walked on,
106 IX | my poor friend.”~The old man was stricken, feeling his
107 IX | suddenly turned against this man, whom he had followed, whom
108 IX | are forsaking a poor old man who came here to be with
109 IX | unjust, pere Marowsko; a man must have very strong motives
110 IX | Rosemilly.”~The worthy man was astounded.~“Heh? What?
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