Chapter
1 I | would question their new friend about the departed captain;
2 I | said Mme. Roland to her friend.~“To be sure I will, with
3 I | lawyer, and in a way his friend, managing his business for
4 I | Lecanu is our very good friend; he knows that Pierre is
5 I | should think so!”~“He was a friend of yours?”~Roland replied: “
6 I | Roland replied: “Our best friend, monsieur, but a fanatic
7 I | heavens! Poor Leon—our poor friend! Dear me! Dear me! Dead!”~
8 I | forgotten him; he was a true friend.”~The lawyer smiled.~“I
9 I | was that of the death of a friend, of Roland’s best friend;
10 I | friend, of Roland’s best friend; and the old man himself
11 I | not saying that our poor friend Marechal had left his fortune
12 I | aloud:~“Ah, he was a good friend, very devoted, very faithful,
13 I | a word of regret for the friend so generous in his death.~
14 II | at home this evening. A friend of my father’s, who is lately
15 II | at finding that his young friend had been sacrificed, he
16 II | come into the money of a friend of the family?~But the cautious
17 III | or his aunt?”~“No. An old friend of my parents’.”~“Only a
18 III | of my parents’.”~“Only a friend! Impossible! And you—did
19 III | should leave his fortune to a friend’s two sons was the most
20 III | another dinner, given by a friend of his at Mendon, after
21 III | Havre the son of our worthy friend Roland, skipper of the Pearl.”~
22 III | brother, you know. Such a friend as one does not make twice—
23 III | no more—no more. A true friend—a real true friend—wasn’
24 III | true friend—a real true friend—wasn’t he, Louise?”~His
25 III | Yes; he was a faithful friend.”~Pierre looked at his father
26 IV | before we knew him as a friend.”~Pierre, who was eating
27 IV | had certainly been a good friend to them, one of those good
28 IV | said: “Thank you, my kind friend,” flashed on his brain,
29 IV | never, never have been the friend of his father, who was so
30 V | conclusion:~That portrait—of a friend, of a lover, had remained
31 V | was a good and faithful friend to the last. Even on his
32 VI | she began again:~“My good friend, you are no longer a child,
33 VIII| Marchand, who is a great friend of the Chairman of the Board.”~“
34 VIII| would be enough if your friend M. Marchand would lay them
35 IX | Havre, and a particular friend of Captain Beausires’s.
36 IX | I am going away, my poor friend.”~The old man was stricken,
37 IX | pretty way of greeting a friend.”~She fixed her eyes on
38 IX | to go to breakfast with a friend. Then Jean led the way with
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