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Alphabetical    [«  »]
malicious 3
malignity 1
mamma 4
man 272
man-milliner 1
man-servant 1
manage 3
Frequency    [«  »]
286 were
284 or
273 said
272 man
268 could
267 wilkie
264 did
Émile Gaboriau
Baron Trigault's Vengeance

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man

    Chapter
1 1,1| the only thought, when a man finds himself victimized, 2 1,1| sake," he muttered, like a man who foresees the futility 3 1,1| well-known fact that the wine a man drinks in his own shop is 4 1,1| sister was the wife of a man named Greloux, who had once 5 1,2| Pascal?" ~But the wretched man seemed turned to stone, 6 1,2| for you to know who this man Vantrasson is, and how and 7 1,2| suddenly remembered the man who, on the morning that 8 1,2| remembered that this strange man had said: "If you ever need 9 2,1| her dresses fitted on by a man? I says that it's indecent. 10 2,1| does not care about that. A man who - - " ~He stopped short; 11 2,1| style," she was saying. ~A man's voice, with a strong Teutonic 12 2,3| terrible secrets which make a man and his wife enemies, and 13 2,4| what I, a plain, honest man, read every day in the newspapers. 14 2,4| and I am truly a fortunate man!" ~In the smoking-room, 15 3,1| never consent to help me. A man would never forgive another 16 3,1| would never forgive another man for hearing what I have 17 3,1| you forgotten the innocent man who was caught in that infamous 18 3,1| strongly tempted to murder this man, who had discovered the 19 3,1| I believe you! You are a man of honor - I only needed 20 3,1| d'Argeles's house - the man of self-satisfied mien and 21 3,1| comedian; this was the real man. ~ ~After a little while 22 3,1| him, I wish to reach the man whose instrument he was." ~ ~" 23 3,1| of dishonoring an honest man?" ~ ~"The Marquis de Valorsay." ~ ~ 24 3,1| honorable, or more courageous man. He is one of my few trusted 25 3,3| You, a practical, worldly man, give way to such a burst 26 3,3| shoulders with the air of a man who has made up his mind 27 3,4| was also, it appears, a man of remarkable energy and 28 3,4| them both; and he was a man to keep his vow unmoved 29 3,4| long years had pursued the man who, by seducing his wife, 30 3,4| that he would die by this man's hand. He saw danger on 31 3,4| the part of a really brave man, if he had not confessed 32 3,4| despicable women who make a man hate the entire sex. Pretending 33 3,4| The count was a patient man," sneered the baron. ~"Not 34 4,1| as to extort money from a man who had once loved her. " 35 4,1| Ferailleur?" he said, like a man suddenly aroused from some 36 4,2| was being decided in this man's mind, that his whole future 37 4,2| league to ruin an honest man don't sign a contract to 38 4,2| plan would be to find some man devoted to our interests 39 4,2| Valorsay should be watched by a man of quick perception - a 40 4,2| of quick perception - a man clever enough to make himself 41 4,2| case of need. I will be the man, monsieur, if you will allow 42 4,2| to take the place of the man you intended to send. The 43 5,1| How was it that a clever man like M. Fortunat made such 44 5,1| character of a sporting man. Wilkie really imagined 45 5,1| Why should such a rich man stoop to cheat?" asked his 46 5,2| handsome suite of rooms. A man, who was still young, and 47 5,3| yourself like an honest man. From this moment you are 48 5,3| superfluities which delight a young man had been forgotten. There 49 5,4| are three louis a day to a man who hires a box for first 50 5,4| performances at the opera, to a man who gambles and gives expensive 51 5,4| expensive suppers, to a man who drives out with yellow-haired 52 5,4| reproaches. The interesting young man threw the letter into the 53 5,4| large a one for a young man of your age." ~This letter 54 5,5| would be willing to give the man who put you in possession 55 5,5| jesting. What would you give a man who - " ~"I would give him 56 5,5| certainly. What wouldn't a man promise in all sincerity 57 5,5| the matter, since I am the man who can put you in possession 58 5,5| morning I am simply Coralth, a man of the middle classes who 59 5,5| to me. I will consult a man of business; and I will 60 5,6| viscount. Who could this young man be? He did not remember 61 5,6| it happen that this young man had been just on the spot 62 5,6| through life as he had done, a man makes enemies at every step; 63 5,6| your faith you are a dead man. You know me. You know how 64 5,6| telling this interesting young man who his mother really was, 65 5,6| her paternal home with a man she loved. Forsaken afterward, 66 6,1| 1~"This man carries away your secret; 67 6,1| drawing-room behind him. This man had addressed her by the 68 6,1| lips to pronounce. This man knew that she, Lia d'Argeles, 69 6,1| overwhelmed her. It is true this man Fortunat had declared that 70 6,1| learned conclusively. "If the man came here," she murmured, " 71 6,1| very dangerous and cunning man. He had set a trap for her, 72 6,1| thinking of Wilkie. So this man, this Isidore Fortunat, 73 6,2| have discovered him. The man who stole my share of earthly 74 6,2| suicide - the sister of the man whom I was vainly pursuing? 75 6,3| assist that unfortunate man who was dishonored here 76 6,3| silent when that innocent man entreated you to testify 77 6,3| not know that the young man was beloved by my brother' 78 6,3| she possessed - from the man who was her only hope, Baron 79 6,4| speak in this style of a man whom I once loved so devotedly. 80 6,4| terrible, like the sin. This man for whom I had abandoned 81 6,4| which I had plunged. This man, with whom I had been so 82 6,4| No matter. My son is a man; he must learn to earn his 83 6,5| what shall I do about this man Fortunat, who called upon 84 6,5| capable of suspecting a man of any knavery. These Turks 85 6,5| he was a very discerning man, he added, not without a 86 7,1| to go in," said the young man roughly. "I wish to speak 87 7,2| parents. This morning, a man with whom you are well acquainted, 88 7,3| flattered himself that he was a man of mettle - and he remained 89 7,4| Wilkie positively felt like a man who had just fallen from 90 7,4| amusement where a young man can squander money. And 91 7,4| already the ingenious young man had shown unmistakable signs 92 7,5| should be the most stylish man in Paris. The count's estate 93 7,5| do?" ~"Everything that a man can do when he has a taste 94 7,6| door was flung open, and a man sprang upon him. It was 95 7,6| right that every honest man possesses to chastise a 96 7,6| uttered was so vile that no man could fail to resent it, 97 7,6| that was the name of the man who had brought him cakes 98 7,7| Then he must have found a man who said to him: 'Go to 99 7,7| convinced that his adviser is a man of experience in such matters - 100 7,7| Ferailleur's. There's a man for you! and if Mademoiselle 101 8,1| and sustained her - the man who had promised her his 102 8,1| to drive away. ~But the man did not stir. "Pardon - 103 8,1| thirty-five francs." ~The man went to his carriage lamp 104 8,4| You, the daughter of a man who possessed an income 105 8,4| very worthy and excellent man, was peculiar in some of 106 8,4| the wife of that strange man who spends all his time 107 9,1| appeared. "So you are the man who teaches his drivers 108 9,1| listening with the air of a man who is meditating some crushing 109 9,1| Give me your bill." ~The man, in whose face doubt, fear, 110 9,1| Mademoiselle Marguerite thought the man was going to beg "Madame 111 9,1| inflexible. She sent the man about his business, saying, " 112 9,4| helping hand. What kind of a man is he? If he is accessible 113 9,4| She went in, and seeing a man standing at the door of 114 9,4| He is here," replied the man. "Does madame come for a 115 9,5| she wished to say, for a man of five-and-thirty, wearing 116 9,5| only for a second. The man's honest, kindly face told 117 9,6| thought, "and woe to the man who raises his hand against 118 9,6| discovered that the worthy man had spent the day as profitably 119 9,6| and to recoup this worthy man, the General had purchased 120 9,6| shall be at the house of a man who can perhaps discover 121 10,1| will be eternally true. A man may be humble or powerful, 122 10,2| M. de Coralth, who was a man of wide experience, would 123 10,2| miracle I should have killed a man - the king of men. Ah, well! 124 10,2| volumes, was no greater a man than Chupin. "So you may 125 10,3| have it!" he muttered; "my man's caught!" And he darted 126 10,3| they thought the young man quite right; but they did 127 10,3| to the porter. "A blind man, perhaps, might not be able 128 10,4| Hush, my son! When a man doesn't wish to be recognized, 129 10,4| Toto! Since I heard that man's voice, I'm sure that he 130 10,4| plants and flowers. An old man, who seemed to be the concierge, 131 10,6| round, and seeing an old man smoking his pipe on the 132 10,6| Baron Trigault," replied the man, without releasing his hold 133 11,1| by-ways of Paris as an honest man of the middle classes would 134 11,1| A bald-headed, corpulent man, who looked some fifty years 135 11,1| scrutinizing - in appraising the man, as it were. "What is this 136 11,1| thought. "He's a middle class man, that's evident from his 137 11,2| profit by the ignominy of the man she loved. "The plan isn' 138 11,3| He'll hate me." ~"The man who wants his dog to love 139 11,3| altogether unworthy of a man." ~It is only just to say 140 11,4| presentiment told her that this man was better acquainted with 141 11,4| necessity of confiding in this man, for the more she looked 142 11,4| Fortunat to dismiss the young man in the blouse, whose presence 143 11,4| in clearing an innocent man who has been vilely slandered, 144 11,4| might save the drowning man. People fancy he is rich; 145 11,5| what I cannot perform. A man should never touch a pen 146 11,5| infamy in detail. But a man cannot always be on the 147 11,5| that. Dishonor an innocent man! It was base, cowardly, 148 11,5| zeal now. Her scorn for the man was only increased; but 149 11,5| character, and he is not the man to be crushed by an infamous 150 12,1| He was no longer the same man when he left the princely 151 12,1| An honest and experienced man, powerful by reason of his 152 12,1| his help. Thanks to this man whom misfortune had made 153 12,1| deceived, then, in the worthy man who came to offer us his 154 12,1| senses, and forget the worthy man who has exiled himself for 155 12,1| terrible risk, is an imprudent man. But when this woman has 156 12,2| Vantrasson's brother-in-law, a man named Greloux, who was formerly 157 12,2| sister's apprentice. This man, who has since become an 158 12,2| so vile a rascal as this man Vantrasson should have dared 159 12,4| dying father to renounce the man she loves, and to bestow 160 13,1| greatly esteemed him: for the man must be stupid indeed who 161 13,1| monsieur - - " began the young man. ~"Yes - I know - I know!" 162 13,1| shoulders good-naturedly, like a man who fails to see that he 163 13,2| parvenu like myself - a man whose domestic happiness 164 13,2| beheld a very corpulent man, with a very red face, a 165 13,2| no one knew, not even the man himself. Perhaps it was 166 13,3| by a young, fair-haired man, whose mustaches were waxed 167 13,3| slightest suspicion that the man he had tried to ruin - his 168 13,4| during the past week. A man may be a scapegrace and 169 13,4| stretched himself, as a man is apt to do after the conclusion 170 13,4| that if he allowed this man to see what a terrible blow 171 13,5| just now." ~"Nonsense! a man worth seven or eight millions 172 13,5| is not the magnitude of a man's income that constitutes 173 13,5| has no business to keep a man in hot water for three days 174 13,5| it possible that a rich man like you can be troubled 175 13,5| uneasily on his chair, like a man who is waiting for an opportunity 176 13,6| see that you are a shrewd man, Monsieur Maumejan," said 177 13,7| and again. "Who is this man? What new piece of infamy 178 13,7| around him styled "form." "A man should no more be disturbed 179 13,7| allow me to fight. When a man has an income of a million, 180 13,7| sufficiently sure of the man's guilt to noise it abroad. 181 13,7| the baron, "tell us the man's name. This gentleman here" - 182 13,7| incur the risk of accusing a man who belongs in the very 183 13,7| the very best society; a man who is very rich and very 184 13,8| everybody says to me: 'Prince, a man like you ought to make your 185 13,8| without reading: 'Such a man ought to be a patron of 186 13,8| it were proved that the man who has charge of my stables 187 13,8| regarded as the most swindled man in Europe. But though he 188 13,8| with ridicule. Besides, the man is a dangerous enemy. And 189 13,8| were knit; he looked like a man who was meditating a decisive 190 13,8| that you once assisted a man who was in a similar position. 191 14,1| for satisfaction to the man who had insulted him. A 192 14,1| everywhere: "You see that young man? - he is the hero of that 193 14,1| form of his father, this man whom he did not know, but 194 14,2| Chupin. ~At sight of the man who had so long been his 195 14,2| the intervention of the man who had prevented him from 196 14,2| that he can't trample a man under foot with impunity. 197 14,4| to turn and fly, when the man clothed in black opened 198 14,4| The interesting young man lifted his hand, and, by 199 14,4| your father, the terrible man with whom your mother has 200 14,5| will see you," said the man, impudently. "Ah! if I were 201 15,1| why does not God allow a man's face to reflect at least 202 15,1| something of his nature? This man, who was a corrupt and audacious 203 15,1| my hand in marriage to a man who was not of noble birth. 204 15,2| with that air which a brave man, condemned to death, would 205 15,3| and not the wife of the man whom I called my husband: 206 15,3| And I should now be a rich man,' he added, 'a very rich 207 15,3| he added, 'a very rich man - I should be rolling through 208 15,4| the feverish anxiety of a man who feels that he is constantly 209 15,5| street lamp, I perceived a man who looked some thirty years 210 15,5| treason and ingratitude.' The man who spoke in this fashion 211 15,6| than this interesting young man would have been crushed 212 15,6| whole. However I know a man, formerly the Count de Chalusse' 213 15,6| in this task." ~"And this man's name?" ~"Is Isidore Fortunat. 214 15,6| shock such a brilliant young man as M. Wilkie. "Do you take 215 15,6| us one of my friends - a man who acts on the square, 216 15,6| son on his guard against a man whom she considered the 217 16,1| alone. ~However strong a man's nature may be, he always 218 16,1| making himself out to be "a man of bronze," or "a block 219 16,1| in his business - such a man as you will need, in fact, 220 16,2| the house, a very worthy man. Monsieur will not find 221 16,2| same crafty and ambitious man, constantly tormented by 222 16,2| anything to gratify it - the man of the period, in short, 223 16,2| alarming circumstances. I am a man, that is to say, I am liable 224 16,2| of those cases in which a man must be left to his own 225 16,3| affair. Before receiving a man's estate, one must know 226 16,3| the address of my business man? He is a very clever fellow, 227 16,4| Madame Leon will let this man into the Hotel de Chalusse 228 16,4| key of. Vantrasson, as the man is called, knows the management 229 16,4| peace. That's true, but this man tells me that he can remove 230 16,4| think she will reply to the man who says to her: 'I love 231 16,4| Chalusse distrusted this man, and proof of his breach 232 16,4| him. You do not forget the man you have ruined and dishonored. 233 17,1| them. "A perfect queen! A man would willingly allow himself 234 17,1| going to add: "an honest man." But it is scarcely proper 235 17,2| madness to hope to discover a man who had such strong reasons 236 17,2| individual. He was the very same man who had answered Mademoiselle 237 17,2| a portly, pleasant-faced man. ~Chupin repaired at once 238 17,2| Soufflot, where he found the man in charge of the stand in 239 17,2| he could have followed a man bearing a lighted lantern 240 17,2| Isidore Fortunat's debtors, a man whom he often visited in 241 17,2| he had dared to hope. The man he wanted had charge of 242 17,3| was a stout, jovial-faced man, and he did not hesitate 243 17,4| fourpence, and then sent a man here to seize my goods! 244 17,4| suddenly opened, and a young man clad in black, with a smooth 245 17,4| the indifferent tone of a man who is delivering a message, 246 17,4| followed him. The young man with the clean shaven face 247 17,4| Ferailleur!" ~The young man turned instinctively. Then 248 18,1| frenzied rage must fill this man's heart as he felt himself 249 18,2| from furtively watching the man whom they wished to compel 250 18,2| information from this young man, and so she remained. ~His 251 18,2| wearied of telling me that the man whom you honored with your 252 18,2| his mind, he continued: "A man does not insult a woman, 253 18,2| she remarked, aloud: "A man cannot set a very high value 254 18,3| understand the unfortunate young man's intentions, and she listened 255 18,5| that she could make this man - who loved her in spite 256 19,1| of the servants, and the man started on his mission at 257 19,1| between herself and the young man who had so abruptly offered 258 19,2| the instructions of the man in whom she felt such unbounded 259 19,2| her son, making him the man whom Marguerite had freely 260 19,3| impatience and hope, stood a man who was counting the seconds 261 19,4| sister, perhaps, as for the man who had seduced her, and 262 19,4| was known as an eccentric man, but whose honesty seemed 263 19,4| are in the possession of a man of dubious integrity, who 264 19,5| at this moment - a young man destitute of heart and intelligence, 265 19,5| With them was a bearded man who, as soon as she appeared, 266 20,1| temporary arrangement. A man like himself, living in 267 20,1| to this fortunate young man. ~So M. de Valorsay had 268 20,2| name, wished to see the man who had aided and advised 269 20,2| party in the rear of the man announced under the name 270 20,2| Ferailleur, the honorable man who was falsely accused 271 20,2| shall atone for this. The man's an impostor! - he lies! - 272 20,3| and short of it. But what man of you is not embarrassed?


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