Chapter

 1       II|      such a degree that his good fortune had become proverbial. That
 2       II|          portion of his personal fortune, which had been invested
 3      III|       the revolution, a princely fortune.~ ~Taking refuge in London
 4      III|   married her.~ ~She possessed a fortune of two hundred and fifty
 5       IV|     return to you— to give you a fortune.”~ ~As she sprang forward
 6        V|          who had amassed a small fortune would have desired a larger,
 7        V|          an orphan, destitute of fortune, he married her, considering
 8       VI|    education in keeping with her fortune and her new rank.~ ~And
 9        X|         control of this enormous fortune; he disposed of the capital
10        X|         possession of his entire fortune, and I should be left without
11        X|         a lackey. If I enjoy his fortune, it is only because he is
12        X|          well for you, with your fortune! Still, if you really think
13        X|           my dear sir, is not my fortune yours? Yes, such is really
14       XI| voluntarily surrender a princely fortune—and he was insulted. This
15     XIII|   friends.~ ~“The history of his fortune,” he continued, “is the
16      XIV|     noble guests.~ ~Decorations, fortune, honors, power—they desired
17      XIV|      tarnish the brilliancy of a fortune of more than a million in
18      XVI|     enjoyed for so long a time a fortune which did not belong to
19      XVI|          I am anxious to amass a fortune of my own.”~ ~“Would it
20      XVI|         that restrain other men. Fortune, friends, life, honor—I
21     XVII|        deal, even a third of his fortune, to be rid of her.~ ~This
22     XVII|       you with her insolent good fortune—after she overwhelmed you
23   XXVIII|       fine crops, and to amass a fortune, seemed to me, then, the
24   XXVIII|     night I gave body, soul, and fortune to the cause. Others were
25   XXVIII|         who has just given you a fortune, to despair and penury,
26     XXIX|        Now I am grateful for the fortune that will enable me to make
27     XXXI|        he would still be worth a fortune.~ ~Though he died from lack
28     XXXI|          will not bring you good fortunetraitor!”~ ~But Chupin,
29    XXXVI|         doubtful.~ ~By rare good fortune the mother of the proprietor
30    XXXVI|  ambitions, of her hopes, of her fortune, of her happiness, and of
31  XXXVIII|          honesty gave you back a fortune? By murdering him, and by
32  XXXVIII|         I offered my name and my fortune to your sister.”~ ~“I would
33       XL|         of speaking to me of his fortune. I trust he may be happy.
34      XLI|       onion had lavished a small fortune on the decorations of this
35     XLII|         to insult a man like me. Fortune, favor, position— he shall
36     XLIV|  sacrificed all—family, friends, fortune, the present and the future—
37     XLVI|        This knowledge is worth a fortune, my boy, if you are not
38       LI|        my husband. His name, his fortune, his talents, the favor
39       LI|         by reason of his immense fortune, the Marquis de Sairmeuse
40      LII|         thought, “I believe that fortune smiles upon me.”~ ~To discover
41      LII|        to the proportions of the fortune which he squandered. He
42     LIII|        his opinion, Marie-Anne’s fortune must be consecrated to one
43     LIII|         from which he realized a fortune of one hundred thousand
44     LIII|         and keep my secret, your fortune is made.”~ ~A shrill cry
45      LIV|      their satisfaction and good fortune before the eyes of the multitude.
46      LIV|         possessed an independent fortune, and he had a hundred reasons—
47       LV|  to-morrow, but this evening. My fortune~ ~and my life are at your
Best viewed with any browser at 800x600 or 768x1024 on Tablet PC
IntraText® (VA2) - Some rights reserved by EuloTech SRL - 1996-2010. Content in this page is licensed under a Creative Commons License