Chapter

  1        I|         have delivered us, will not go so long as a shilling or
  2        I|            my hand and said: ‘Well! go and tell them to saddle
  3        I|            he chooses; we shall not go in search of him.”~ ~“No!
  4        I|           him.”~ ~“No! we shall not go in search of him,” echoed
  5        I|     exclaimed the peasants; “let us go at once!”~ ~They were starting,
  6       II|            the field of battle, who go back, seeking a ditch or
  7      III|         breakfasted yet.”~ ~“Let us go in,” the duke said to his
  8      III|        hands.~ ~It was the order to go and obtain this repast from
  9        V|          youth could not resolve to go away without an explanation,
 10        V|         these men. I shall not even go to the chateau to remove
 11       VI|           ventured Maurice, “I will go and ascertain——”~ ~“Go,”
 12       VI|         will go and ascertain——”~ ~“Go,” replied the baron, quietly; “
 13       VI|             compelled me to let him go. But he had better make
 14       VI|           from his chair.~ ~“I must go and take possession of my
 15       IX|              Have courage, Maurice. Go away—leave Escorvalforget
 16       IX|          Already he was starting to go, he knew not where. Marie-Anne
 17       IX|          life, I approve it. Do not go to find my father. If, moved
 18       IX|      peasants, to become a peasant. Go! I cannot endure more! Go!
 19       IX|           Go! I cannot endure more! Go! and remember that one cannot
 20       XI|        first advance; you, Marquis, go and find Monsieur Lacheneur,
 21       XI|          receive anything from you! Go; learn that your millions
 22       XI|          Enough! enough!” said he; “go back to your home.”~ ~And
 23       XI|         formerly friendly tones:~ ~“Go, you little wretch! do you
 24     XIII|           might be construed into, “Go and look for her if you
 25     XIII|           father and the marquis to go upstairs without him.~ ~
 26     XIII|       visitors.~ ~She trembled, let go her hold on Martial’s arm,
 27       XV|            his only answer: “Let us go at once.”~ ~And when the
 28       XV|          tone when he said to you: ‘Go, you little wretch! do you
 29      XVI|           Chanlouineau, he said:~ ~“Go outside for a few moments.”~ ~
 30      XVI|              take him with you, and go far away.”~ ~“Ah! how can
 31      XVI|            frontier is not far off; go, and wait in a foreign land
 32      XVI|          and Jean would not let him go out of their sight.~ ~He
 33     XVII|         been mistaken—now she could go home satisfied.~ ~But no.
 34     XVII|             upon the price. We must go. Good-by, my dear. Come,
 35      XIX|         more than a week he did not go to Lacheneur’s house.~ ~
 36      XIX|      Greatly alarmed, he decided to go and see his former friend,
 37       XX|           someone take a horse, and go and tell my son to come
 38       XX|              The messenger ought to go to Sairmeuse and return
 39      XXI|          the baron.~ ~“You will not go, Lacheneur,” he said. “You
 40     XXII|             pleased these people to go slowly.~ ~Suddenly the entire
 41     XXII|          they, themselves, offer to go, on condition that the peasants
 42    XXIII|             worthy priest dared not go away. He waited, hoping
 43    XXIII|             pursue. Should each man go his way? or should they
 44    XXIII|             is to serve Marie-Anne. Go at once, and take her with
 45     XXIV|           frenzied accents. “I will go to the field of battle,
 46     XXIV|             bring the person to me. Go, and make haste!”~ ~The
 47     XXIV|           Escorval; “where will you go?”~ ~Marie-Anne lifted her
 48     XXIV|             but duty commands me to go. I must learn what has become
 49      XXV|            assume some disguise and go to Montaignac at once.~ ~
 50      XXV|           if necessary, to bid him “go.”~ ~Moreover, what was not
 51      XXV|            stopped him.~ ~“You must go to Montaignac,” said he, “
 52      XXV|            applied to you. You must go openly, with head erect,
 53      XXV|             assurance of innocence. Go straight to the Duc de Sairmeuse
 54      XXV|         will accompany you; we will go in the carriage.”~ ~Maurice
 55      XXV|           waited for this assent to go and give an order for harnessing
 56      XXV|            only the single word:~ ~“Go!”~ ~He departed; and when
 57     XXVI|          and merely said:~ ~“Let us go—at once.”~ ~But this was
 58     XXVI|       journey’s end.~ ~“And it will go hard with soldier or civilian
 59    XXVII|            knows its value. It will go to the King if necessary.
 60    XXVII|         deposit a great misfortune! Go on, witness.”~ ~“In the
 61    XXVII|           officers, who promised to go with him, to carry him by
 62    XXVII|            been pronounced upon me, go at once to my son. You will
 63   XXVIII|               he exclaimed; “let me go where duty calls me. You
 64   XXVIII|       cannot refuse justice. I will go to him. I will tell him
 65   XXVIII|           One of you gentlemen will go at once and order post-horses.”~ ~
 66   XXVIII|          But, after all, to let her go would be an act of mercy.
 67   XXVIII|             believe it.~ ~“You must go with this worthy man, Marie-Anne,”
 68   XXVIII|          occurred to her.~ ~“Let us go,” she said, quietly.~ ~But
 69   XXVIII|          and he begged the guard to go to the Duc de Sairmeuse,
 70   XXVIII|       Chanlouineau.~ ~“Therefore, I go at once,” replied the old
 71   XXVIII|            to Chanlouineau, “I will go to the duke. I will find
 72     XXIX|           depart; but as he saw her go out into the twilight with
 73     XXIX|          she declared that she must go alone.~ ~“I will return
 74     XXIX|        appearance on the scene. You go wild like a school-boy and
 75     XXIX|             in Montaignac? Will you go about from shop to shop?
 76     XXIX|          the Place d’Armes, where I go to await him.”~ ~
 77      XXX|          lantern, and let the baron go where his slumbers will
 78      XXX|           No one will see me when I go out. Who, then, will dare
 79      XXX|            culprit of my providing. Go now; I have told you all.
 80      XXX|         added, gayly:~ ~“But let us go—my father cannot harangue
 81      XXX|             shall not know where to go, for the regiment, you see,
 82     XXXI|  proclaiming this infamous edict.~ ~Go where he would now, he was
 83     XXXI|             to Montaignac. He would go to the authorities and say: “
 84     XXXI|            their supper, they would go to Saint-Jean-de-Coche and
 85     XXXI|        these worthy people. “I will go at once, sir,” said he,
 86     XXXI|         where he was; and I saw him go down the footpath leading
 87    XXXIV|        detain him.~ ~“You shall not go!” she exclaimed, intensely
 88     XXXV|             certainly impossible to go back after it! and how can
 89     XXXV|         idle conjectures.~ ~“Better go down on the double-quick,”
 90     XXXV|            decide where they should go to obtain it, when Corporal
 91     XXXV|          much courage as it does to go and fight.”~ ~“Ah! you are
 92    XXXVI|         take my leave, but before I go, I shall take occasion to
 93    XXXVI|        address are upon this paper. Go to them, and in that way
 94    XXXVI|          imperious voice:~ ~“I will go no farther,” she said; “
 95   XXXVII|      remember it, Monsieur le Cure. Go and obtain the ropes.”~ ~
 96   XXXVII|             not reflected, he would go at once; he asked only to
 97   XXXVII|          cause her untold tortures. Go at once. Cross the frontier
 98   XXXVII|         brusquely:~ ~“So be it; but go at once; your name is not
 99   XXXVII|        allow him an opportunity.~ ~“Go, go at once,” he insisted. “
100   XXXVII|          him an opportunity.~ ~“Go, go at once,” he insisted. “
101   XXXVII|            worthy of him.~ ~“I will go and challenge Martial now,
102  XXXVIII|          put it in that way, let us go on.”~ ~They entered the
103  XXXVIII|              Now,” said he, “let us go. We must avoid another scene.
104  XXXVIII|          Maurice. Why should he not go there?~ ~He set out at once,
105    XXXIX|         what if they have? Let them go to the devil!”~ ~Of the
106    XXXIX|            made no reply.~ ~“Did he go away with the son of that
107    XXXIX|             soon return. They shall go for him at once, or I will
108    XXXIX|          for him at once, or I will go for him myself——”~ ~He left
109    XXXIX|          been insulted, and he will go there. Will he encounter
110      XLI|           Fly? but where should she go? And by going, would she
111      XLI|            best chamber.~ ~“I might go to the Borderie at night,”
112      XLI|             returned from Piedmont; go to the notary, take possession
113      XLI|          liberty to-day, and he can go with us to break the seals
114     XLII| combinations of circumstances which go by the name of chance.~ ~
115     XLII|             the words of the great! Go your way; and if you have
116    XLIII|           the Borderie, and he will go there, I must be informed
117    XLIII|             for you at Courtornieu. Go!”~ ~He departed without
118    XLIII|           that Jean Lacheneur would go and live at the Borderie
119     XLIV|           here, I shall not let you go. You will not desert me.
120     XLIV|         awaited her.~ ~When she did go, she found, not the worthy
121      XLV|          nothing stirred:~ ~“Let us go nearer,” she said to Aunt
122      XLV|       staircase.~ ~Where should she go? where could she conceal
123      XLV|       Marie-Anne take the light and go downstairs. Blanche was
124     XLVI|           heart of Mme. Blanche.~ ~“Go on! call your lover, call!”
125    XLVII|            said at last, “but I can go no farther. It has been
126    XLVII|           horse, my boy, and I will go and wake her.”~ ~Certainly
127    XLVII|          distance did he venture to go back to the Borderie.~ ~
128    XLVII|           to try,” responded Jean. “Go back to the house, sir;
129   XLVIII|           than it had taken them to go to the Borderie.~ ~It was
130   XLVIII|                For her sake, I will go to Courtornieu. In memory
131     XLIX|            and when they desired to go out they shut him up, not
132     XLIX|     declared that not a penny would go into his pockets.~ ~This
133       LI|          And without regret.”~ ~“To go where, pray?”~ ~“To Paris.
134       LI|      evening, I felt as if I should go mad myself.”~ ~Blanche shrugged
135       LI|          command and I say: ‘I will go!’ Yes, I intend to go with
136       LI|          will go!’ Yes, I intend to go with you to Paris—and I
137       LI|            you to Paris—and I shall go. Ah! it surprises you to
138       LI|          you do, yourself? You will go to Court, to balls, and
139       LI|           since I knew not where to go. Ah! you have abused me
140       LI|           desire diversion. I shall go to Paris with you.”~ ~By
141       LI|              Because——”~ ~“Will you go to the authorities and denounce
142       LI|            his breakfast.~ ~“I must go and see my agent at once,”
143      LII|             and his business, then. Go on, aunt,” she added; “we
144      LII|              since this is the casego!”~ ~It seemed, indeed, as
145      LII|      leaving you here alone. I must go to Sairmeuse at once. I
146      LII|             ordered the servants to go and tell Mme. Blanche that
147     LIII|           to my comrade?”~ ~“I will gotell him that I will go!”
148     LIII|             go—tell him that I will go!” she said, driven to desperation.~ ~
149      LIV|          would be better for him to go away for a while, and allow
150      LIV|                She did not offer to go with him. It would have
151      LIV|         charity.~ ~“But he will not go in,” thought Lacheneur,
152      LIV|                 And Martial did not go in. Though he was horrified
153      LIV|            fast as his horses could go.~ ~But the duke had scarcely
154       LV|             said he; “I wish you to go to the Hotel de Sairmeuse
155       LV|            to the contrary, you may go in.”~ ~Lecoq entered.~ ~
156       LV|           Chupin’s cabin.~ ~“I must go to Sairmeuse at once,” he
157       LV|           But the messenger did not go.~ ~He slipped the letter
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