Chapter

  1        I|         the horse you were riding just now?”~ ~“I did not buy it;
  2       II|          his fist.~ ~“And if I am just as obstinate,” he exclaimed—“
  3       II|        Sairmeuse and his son have just arrived. They have asked
  4      III|  father-in-law, Lord Holland, had just died, and the duke was detained
  5      III|         to her master:~ ~“That is just the sort of man he is; he
  6      III|           the events which he had just witnessed in Paris, and
  7        V|           M. Lacheneur.~ ~“We are just going to your father’s house,”
  8        V|       related the scene which had just taken place at the presbytery.~ ~
  9       VI|         information.”~ ~A man had just appeared around a turn of
 10       IX|       Certainly not, since he had just refused an alliance of which
 11        X|           unfaithful servant, had just relieved him of an anxiety
 12        X|         his life.~ ~Lacheneur had just placed the Duc de Sairmeuse
 13       XI|           and that his resentmentjust, I confess, will vanish
 14       XI|    bewildered by the scene he had just witnessed, and stupefied
 15       XI|          stupefied by what he had just heard; and it was not until
 16       XI|     father the story which he had just related to the daughter.~ ~
 17      XII|    picturing Marie-Anne as he had just seen her, blushing and paling,
 18     XIII|          this letter which I have just been reading has, I confess,
 19     XIII|    satisfied herself that she had just grounds for her suspicions;
 20     XIII|    gallantry.~ ~This girl who had just emerged from a convent was
 21      XIV|              An old gentleman had just risen, and proposed that
 22       XV|        some great catastrophe had just befallen the house of the
 23       XV|      whose coming they awaited.~ ~Just as the light of the morning
 24      XVI|       replied:~ ~“Why, I have but just come, my dear friend.”~ ~
 25      XVI|       found him a man.~ ~Jean was just twenty; but his haggard
 26      XVI|        such a sum as I consider a just recompense for my services.
 27      XVI|        you to wait a moment; I am just finishing some business,
 28      XVI|         after the avowal you have just made?”~ ~Lacheneur saw the
 29     XVII|        bouquet of roses which had just been sent by Martial.~ ~
 30      XIX|          The Duc de Sairmeuse had just received, with his brevet
 31       XX|         March, 1816, the duke was just sitting down to dinner when
 32      XXI|          not mistaken. Marie-Anne just told us the place of rendezvous.
 33     XXII|          was a fatality about it! Just as we were perfecting our
 34     XXII|    Perhaps—that depends. You have just passed the Croix dArcy;
 35     XXII|        those people what you have just told me?”~ ~“Not a word.”~ ~“
 36    XXIII|          reached the Croix dArcy just as the firing at Montaignac
 37    XXIII|          must, it shall be so!”~ ~Just then Chanlouineau appeared.~ ~
 38     XXIV|    equable in temper, so kind and just to his inferiors, that his
 39     XXIV|      servants, rushed to the door just in time to see a cabriolet
 40     XXIV|           of your confidence in a just and beneficial God?”~ ~“
 41     XXIV|         His sobs interrupted him. Just then a faint moan was heard.~ ~
 42     XXIV|        easy to gull that fool who just left here, it is not so
 43      XXV|  imploring the mercy and aid of a just God.~ ~They could only pray.
 44      XXV|      these poor people. The duke, just then, was not troubling
 45     XXVI|          really terrified. He had just learned that the military
 46    XXVII|           of their robe which had just been miserably sullied,
 47    XXVII|              Baron dEscorval had just signed his death-warrant.~ ~
 48    XXVII|     rendezvous?”~ ~“Lacheneur had just informed me.”~ ~“If I believed
 49    XXVII|        priest re-entered the hall just in time to see the baron
 50   XXVIII|           done. The death of this just man would be too great a
 51   XXVIII|       reducing my father, who has just given you a fortune, to
 52     XXIX|           angry and revengeful.~ ~Just then a valet opened the
 53     XXIX|       before my son what you have just said to me.”~ ~Boldly, with
 54     XXIX|        easily. Did I not tell you just now that Chanlouineau had
 55     XXIX| confidence, became gloomy. He had just discovered an unexpected
 56      XXX|           and serene death of the just.~ ~And remembering his past
 57      XXX|          soldier in the corridor, just now? No. That is because
 58      XXX|     corporal. “Someone said to me just now: ‘A friend of the Emperor
 59      XXX|      their companions:~ ~“We have just taken a look at the prisoner.
 60     XXXI|        accorded him. The duke had just received this note when,
 61     XXXI|          He dared not protest, so just was the reproach.~ ~“Nonsense!
 62     XXXI|      knees before him, “they have just started for Saint-Jean-de-Coche,
 63     XXXI|    chanced to say:~ ~“I met a man just now on the mountain who
 64    XXXII|       frightful despair.~ ~He had just given more than life to
 65    XXXII|       only persons who would know just how much to conceal, and
 66    XXXII|          how much to conceal, and just how much to disclose.~ ~
 67    XXXII|          by the duke, and who had just made his appearance.~ ~But
 68   XXXIII|    morning of the escape, he met, just before daybreak, a party
 69     XXXV|          into which the baron had just fallen, and his hands clutched
 70     XXXV|        instant!”~ ~The God of the just was watching.~ ~Bavois arrived
 71     XXXV|          these brave men, who had just saved his father’s life,
 72    XXXVI|        pressed his hand.~ ~“It is just as I supposed,” said he. “
 73    XXXVI|           finished his repast was just leaving the table to settle
 74   XXXVII|         and the old corporal have just arrived; they wish to come
 75   XXXVII|        good abbe was too hasty.~ ~Just when Maurice stood sorely
 76  XXXVIII|     Martial, “after what you have just seen and heard you can no
 77  XXXVIII|     pocket the paper which he had just taken from his desk, and
 78  XXXVIII|            he exclaimed.~ ~He had just remembered the rendezvous
 79    XXXIX|        them openly by the hand.~ ~Just when they believed themselves
 80    XXXIX|            Of the guests that had just left his house there was
 81      XLI|         of folly after what I had just said to him. The baron’s
 82      XLI|        reported that the duke had just passed a week in Paris,
 83      XLI|           to-morrow as if you had just returned from Piedmont;
 84     XLII|     affairs, and regarded it as a just punishment for the traitor.
 85     XLII|       more than half an hour, and just parted from him.~ ~She was
 86      XLV|          ready.~ ~The marquis had just been put to bed, the servants
 87      XLV|       approaching the house when, just as they reached the little
 88      XLV|           Blanche. “And I thought just now that all was too meagre
 89     XLVI|           like that which she had just witnessed. She knew that
 90     XLVI|           His eldest son, who had just returned home, opened the
 91     XLVI|          Lacheneur’s daughter has just been poisoned by Madame
 92    XLVII|           you, Jean?’ said he. ‘I just saw Chupin hiding near your
 93    XLVII|           me to my child.”~ ~“Not just now, Maurice; wait a little.”~ ~“
 94   XLVIII|       eleven oclock, and she was just completing her toilet, when
 95   XLVIII|          shake like a leaf.~ ~But just as she was most disquieted
 96   XLVIII|     through the village. They had just heard of the murder at the
 97        L|     flourish, and bear fruit, had just taken root in her brain.~ ~
 98        L|          Medea:~ ~“Aunt, we leave just one week from to-day.”~ ~
 99       LI|    departure, which her niece had just announced so gayly, had
100       LI|          the matter, for his mind just then was fully occupied.~ ~
101      LII|        you. ‘A terrible thing has just happened at the Borderie,
102      LII|        before his wife.~ ~“I have just ordered post-horses. You
103     LIII|         despondency.~ ~It is only just to say that Mme. Blanche
104     LIII|       Polyteah! such a good son! just eighteen years old, and
105     LIII|        curse you!”~ ~And she died just as the clock was striking
106      LIV|      below.~ ~A singular idea had just occurred to him.~ ~“If Jean
107      LIV|         he had stopped his horse, just around the corner of the
108      LIV|         apartments.~ ~“Madame has just gone down to receive the
109       LV|           tell them that you have just returned from foreign lands;
110       LV|         which compelled him to be just even to his enemies, he
111       LV|         Chupin himself, Lecoq was just a little too late.~ ~Lecoq
112       LV|        outwitted Lecoq!”~ ~He had just left the bath, and enveloped
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