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Alphabetical    [«  »]
makes 12
making 16
malady 4
man 136
manage 1
managed 1
manifest 1
Frequency    [«  »]
145 go
145 very
143 day
136 man
133 them
131 well
129 without
Alexandre Dumas, fils
Camille

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man

    Chapter
1 1 | Three months afterward a man took pity on her and tried 2 1 | anything. ~I went up to the man, to whom I was causing so 3 2 | somebody or other. As no man cares to make himself conspicuous 4 2 | herself, by Vidal, the only man whose pencil could do her 5 2 | It was a blow to the old man, for the resemblance with 6 2 | debauchery of a rich old man, and everything was believed 7 2 | accepting benefits from a man whom she was deceiving. 8 3 | but in the arms of the man who loved her with the whole 9 3 | them? You pity the blind man who has never seen the daylight, 10 3 | pity, and at times a great man has rehabilitated them with 11 3 | wounds by which, like a sick man's bad blood, the evil of 12 3 | efforts of every intelligent man tend in the same direction, 13 3 | small, and he includes the man; the brain is narrow, and 14 4 | at once. ~I saw a young man, blond, tall, pale, dressed 15 4 | must always make on a young man who had liked seeing her. 16 4 | inscription in the book, the young man's hurried journey, his desire 17 4 | from my bed I can hear a man walking to and fro in the 18 4 | a sympathy for the young man, he made me so frankly the 19 5 | Armand. Meeting one day a man who was constantly about 20 5 | interested in the young man in spite of myself. Perhaps 21 5 | about the dead as the young man who gave me my orders." ~ 22 5 | else." ~I looked at the man, and some of my readers 23 5 | there." ~"Thanks, my good man." ~I gave one more look 24 6 | down the cheeks of the sick man, and he turned away his 25 6 | Yes," replied the young man in a dull voice. ~"Then 26 7 | Marguerite Gautier. ~The young man whom I was with recognised 27 7 | could not help saying "Happy man!" ~"Why?" ~"To go and see 28 7 | entitles Am Rauchen, there is a man who one evening follows 29 8 | replied Prudence. "Poor old man, he would be greatly embarrassed 30 8 | box." ~I looked at him. A man of about seventy had sat 31 8 | to have been in the old man's place. ~When they were 32 8 | dear child, there's the man for you.' She, who generally 33 8 | should soon send the old man about his business. He is 34 8 | have seen it since. A young man was leaning against the 35 8 | scene breathed boredom, the man embarrassed by the consciousness 36 9 | sum up their opinion of a man. ~"I have only known you 37 9 | was fated that the poor man was not to say a single 38 9 | back, "he has gone! That man gets frightfully on my nerves!" ~" 39 9 | rich and fashionable young man, ready to waste all his 40 10| very well for a rich old man like the duke, but it is 41 10| is very bad for a young man like you, and the proof 42 11| moments on the pillow, like a man who is tired by much talking 43 11| had promised herself to a man on the morrow of the day 44 11| more likely to choose a man who was attractive to her, 45 11| stopped, and a tall young man left a group of people with 46 11| a few moments; the young man returned to his friends, 47 11| had indicated to me as the man to whom Marguerite owed 48 11| listening to what the young man stammered out, Marguerite 49 11| that one could ask about a man of your age. I told her 50 11| you were a charming young man. That's all." ~"Thanks. 51 11| put out?" ~"No." ~"Poor man!" ~This "Poor man!" was 52 11| Poor man!" ~This "Poor man!" was said in a tone impossible 53 12| nature, by the voice of the man she loves, gives the first 54 12| can be gained by any young man of five-and-twenty. See 55 12| love, how absolutely the man whom she loves dominates 56 12| an example. ~But when the man who inspires this redeeming 57 12| loves as he is loved, this man drains at one draught all 58 12| things be. ~One day a young man is passing in the street, 59 12| face. The woman becomes the man's mistress and loves him. 60 12| place in the box, and a man, whom I recognised as the 61 12| by the presence of this man, for she smiled to me again, 62 12| because you have seen a man in my box." ~"It is not 63 13| help it; the idea that that man is her lover hurts me horribly." ~" 64 13| still her lover? He is a man who is useful to her, nothing 65 13| Yes; but he is an old man, and I am sure that Marguerite 66 13| calculation, and puts the man who consents to it, even 67 13| and for this reason: a man with such an income has 68 13| chanced by a miracle on an old man worth ten millions, whose 69 13| you would be an ordinary man, and, casting her past in 70 13| or you would be an honest man, and, feeling bound to keep 71 13| is excusable in a young man, is no longer excusable 72 13| no longer excusable in a man of middle age. It becomes 73 13| neither family nor ambition, man's second and last loves. 74 13| friend Gaston; there's a man who seems to me to understand 75 13| waiting impatiently for the man who is with her to go, thinking 76 13| truth, and if I found a man there I would strike him 77 14| like a child. There is no man to whom a woman has not 78 14| know why I went. Only a man who really cares no more 79 15| she gave me, I asked if man's desire has indeed limits 80 15| sooner than I ever did to any man, I swear to you; and do 81 15| as I always am, to find a man superior enough not to ask 82 15| than of my body. Such a man I found in the duke; but 83 15| I tried to make you the man I had longed for in my noisy 84 15| loved in you was not the man who was, but the man who 85 15| the man who was, but the man who was going to be. You 86 15| said, with the air of a man who is very well satisfied 87 16| father is the most honourable man in the world. When my mother 88 16| though one may be an honest man, one finds oneself ruined 89 16| step, I might elbow the man who had already been her 90 16| accept it save from one man. Let me alone, big baby, 91 17| believing me. The poor old man is always on the watch. 92 17| the incident, but the old man, wounded in his dignity, 93 17| Marguerite leave the young man,' he said to me, 'and, as 94 17| in order to please an old man whose very sight makes me 95 17| Marguerite; you need this man no longer. Am I not here? 96 17| advising her to see the old man again, though I was half 97 18| regard to Mlle. Gautier. This man wanted his money; he was 98 18| living with a penniless young man; the other creditors were 99 19| from me, and that is what a man of honour can not do; while 100 19| another person. The good man imagined I was ruined, and 101 19| state of great delight. The man had promised to pay all 102 19| the sale that this honest man would have gained thirty 103 20| if you will; pay her as a man of honour is bound to pay 104 20| sir, that the mission of a man of honour is to go about 105 20| direction. Love always makes a man better, no matter what woman 106 20| solicitor. Could an honest man carry out such a procedure 107 20| sacrifice? What sort of a man are you, sir, to allow Mlle. 108 21| child, that every young man must have his mistress, 109 22| mishap or other. O vanity of man, coming back to us in every 110 22| day. ~"Yes," answered the man; "with Mme. Duvernoy." ~" 111 22| the mistress of another man. All is over between us. ~" 112 23| herself if this was the same man whom she had known so madly 113 23| Oh, how petty and vile is man when he is wounded in one 114 23| was talking with her. The man who was the lover of such 115 24| which could be expected of a man in love with such a woman 116 24| licensed by the authority of a man. ~At last Marguerite gave 117 24| literally mad. I was like a man drunk upon bad wine, who 118 24| the mistress of another man, other kisses than mine 119 24| you will understand that a man who is not heartless has 120 24| went home like a drunken man, and do you know what I 121 24| gave you this?" I asked the man. ~"A lady who was starting 122 25| and he did not return, a man came to the door and handed 123 25| spoil the future of a young man by such expenditure as I 124 25| passion succeeds the age when man, if he is to be respected, 125 25| might become jealous of a man who has loved you; he might 126 25| marry. She is to marry the man whom she loves; she enters 127 25| honourable. The family of the man who is to become my son-in-law 128 25| the respect of this old man, which I would gain; yours, 129 25| thought that one day this old man, who was now imploring me 130 25| give myself up to another man I glowed with pride at the 131 25| father was the most honest man in the world. ~M. Duval 132 26| take anything from that man. It is through him that 133 26| nine days, but he left a man behind to keep watch. My 134 26| bailiff and sent away the man. ~I talked to him about 135 26| do not know how the old man still keeps alive. He remained 136 26| if the sight of this old man, whom death has forgotten,


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