---------- Find in Files ---------- C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\1rthc10.txt(1041,26):Augustins, and purchased Lousteau's books. In 1836, a Barbet, partner C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\1rthc10.txt(1296,1):Lousteau lived maritally with her. [The Muse of the Department.] A C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\1rthc10.txt(1404,1):Lousteau, in 1836, to Mme. de la Baudraye, the story being obtained-- C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\1rthc10.txt(1539,1):Lousteau. Berthier was cognizant of all the head-clerk's doings. In C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\1rthc10.txt(1628,58):accouched Mme. de la Baudraye who had been intimate with Lousteau; he C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\1rthc10.txt(1816,53):writing of Canalis. [Modeste Mignon.] With Blondet, Lousteau and C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\1rthc10.txt(1821,41):Nucingen.] In January, 1837, his friend Lousteau had him come C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\1rthc10.txt(1822,28):especially to upbraid him, Lousteau, on account of the latter's C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\1rthc10.txt(1825,20):object was to give Lousteau a chance to declare, apparently, his C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\1rthc10.txt(1836,1):Lousteau, Nathan and La Palferine were also present, he heard a story C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\1rthc10.txt(1917,55):a series of masterly articles which called forth from Lousteau the C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\1rthc10.txt(1924,45):"broke" financially. In 1829, 1830, Bixiou, Lousteau, Nathan and he C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\1rthc10.txt(2011,49):small ways. Gatien Boirouge was made game of by Lousteau, to whom he C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\1rthc10.txt(2589,26):daughter of Sub-delegate Lousteau. The doctor did not waste any C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\1rthc10.txt(3237,61):who had been beguiled and compromised by her relations with Lousteau. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\1rthc10.txt(3297,24):to the home of Etienne Lousteau, whom she had planned to have for a C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\1rthc10.txt(3538,18):piloted there by Lousteau. [A Distinguished Provincial at Paris.] He C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\1rthc10.txt(4124,56):consenting to act as godfather to the child she had by Lousteau. [The C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\1rthc10.txt(5067,44):the notary, and in the presence of Bixiou, Lousteau and Nathan, who C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\1rthc10.txt(5355,57):delivered Mme. de la Baudraye of a child at the home of Lousteau, its C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\1rthc10.txt(6033,23):Saint-Fiacre. Etienne Lousteau, Hector Merlin, Felicien Vernou, C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\1rthc10.txt(6151,26):Daniel d'Arthez, Etienne Lousteau and Lucien Chardon de Rubempre. [A C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\1rthc10.txt(6241,36):then the known mistress of Etienne Lousteau. [The Muse of the C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\1rthc10.txt(6334,45):of Lucien de Rubempre, who had come in with Lousteau to dispose of C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\1rthc10.txt(6559,57):Mme. de Nucingen at his mercy. [Father Goriot.] In 1821 Lousteau said C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\1rthc10.txt(7109,8):son of Lousteau, the sub-delegate. Others thought him the son of Dr. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\1rthc10.txt(7110,31):Rouget, a friend and rival of Lousteau. In short "fortunately for the C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\1rthc10.txt(7116,10):motives, Lousteau and Rouget were allowed to believe whatever they C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\1rthc10.txt(7643,17):1836, she heard Lousteau reading ironically fragments of "Olympia." C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\1rthc10.txt(8803,57):Berry. Married Maximilienne, the sister of Sub-Delegate Lousteau. Had C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\1rthc10.txt(8814,59):HOCHON (Madame), wife of the preceding, born Maximilienne Lousteau C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\2rthc10.txt(110,9):Etienne Lousteau, in September 1836. A liaison followed with Etienne C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\2rthc10.txt(111,1):Lousteau, with whom Madame de la Baudraye lived on rue des Martyrs in C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\2rthc10.txt(118,17):unworthiness of Lousteau, finally led Dinah de la Baudraye to rejoin C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\2rthc10.txt(1216,17):Bixiou, Etienne Lousteau, Stidmann and Vernisset. He visited the C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\2rthc10.txt(1337,1):LOUSTEAU, sub-delegate at Issoudun and afterwards the intimate friend C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\2rthc10.txt(1340,9):Bridau. Lousteau died in 1800. [A Bachelor's Establishment.] C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\2rthc10.txt(1342,1):LOUSTEAU (Etienne), son of the preceding, born at Sancerre in 1799, C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\2rthc10.txt(1343,37):nephew of Maximilienne Hochon, born Lousteau, school-mate of Doctor C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\2rthc10.txt(1355,19):francs per month, Lousteau rid Philippe Bridau of his wife, Flore, C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\2rthc10.txt(1359,31):Rubempre with Esther Gobseck. Lousteau wrote criticisms, did work for C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\2rthc10.txt(1366,54):Baudraye is happily delivered of a child; M. Etienne Lousteau has the C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\2rthc10.txt(1367,47):honor of announcing it." During this liaison, Lousteau, for the sum of C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\2rthc10.txt(1372,11):Bohemia." Lousteau's manner of living underwent little change when C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\2rthc10.txt(2474,1):Lousteau lived for three years; he was commissioned for nine hundred C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\2rthc10.txt(2480,20):baronne lived with Lousteau. [The Muse of the Department.] C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\2rthc10.txt(3287,36):About the same time, he supplanted Lousteau, lover of Florine, one of C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\2rthc10.txt(3296,62):Gobseck, who was already much visited by Blondet, Bixiou and Lousteau. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\2rthc10.txt(3329,9):Etienne Lousteau has the honor of announcing it to you." Nathan sought C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\2rthc10.txt(3357,9):Etienne Lousteau in that relation in 1821. She was at that time C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\2rthc10.txt(3365,12):supplanted Lousteau about the middle of Louis Philippe's reign. Her C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\2rthc10.txt(3381,33):Blondet, Andoche Finot, Etienne Lousteau, Felicien Vernou, Couture, C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\2rthc10.txt(4117,38):she managed to separate from Etienne Lousteau. [The Muse of the C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\2rthc10.txt(4402,60):gaming table; and so five years later, about 1821, Etienne Lousteau C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\2rthc10.txt(5373,44):direction of a theatre in association with Lousteau. He had C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\2rthc10.txt(5680,1):Lousteau five hundred francs to compose, and where he made himself C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\2rthc10.txt(5715,48):lived on rue Flechier, and was the mistress of Lousteau, to whom she C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\2rthc10.txt(5719,52):at the Ambigu, she met Madame de la Baudraye, then Lousteau's C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\2rthc10.txt(5789,10):delegate Lousteau, whom Rouget, doubtless wrongly, accused of being C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\2rthc10.txt(5811,15):sub-delegate, Lousteau. Madame Rouget, deprived of her dearly-beloved C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\2rthc10.txt(5883,40):well acquainted with D'Arthez. Etienne Lousteau, who revealed to him C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\2rthc10.txt(5888,37):until her death in 1822. Started by Lousteau into undertaking Liberal C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\2rthc10.txt(6055,9):Etienne Lousteau and Horace Bianchon. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\2rthc10.txt(8571,36):presence of Madame de la Baudraye, Lousteau's mistress. [The Muse of C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\2rthc10.txt(8973,23):Delavigne, Lamartine, Lousteau, Nathan, Vigny, Hugo, Barbier, Marie C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\2rthc10.txt(8980,37):J.-J. Bixiou, Leon de Lora, Etienne Lousteau and Stidmann; he fell C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\2rthc10.txt(9333,55):a hat, and he proposed to sell him a hat like that of Lousteau. On C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(1781,29):stranger's name was Etienne Lousteau. Two years ago he had left his C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(1788,19):Sometimes Etienne Lousteau came for several days together; but in a C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(3198,46):paid for them too. I will go and see Etienne Lousteau, Vernou----" C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(3433,1):Lousteau at Flicoteaux's. That youthful journalist would, doubtless, C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(3447,26):own, when he saw Etienne Lousteau turn the door-handle. Lucien C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(3457,46):Lucien was in his old place by the time that Lousteau reached the C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(3460,52):search of the manuscript of the Marguerites, while Lousteau finished C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(3468,1):Lousteau. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(3481,51):There, on a bench beneath the lime-trees, Etienne Lousteau sat and C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(3484,9):Etienne Lousteau, after a two-years' apprenticeship, was on the staff C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(3501,49):"Are you a 'Classic' or a 'Romantic'?" inquired Lousteau. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(3504,42):affairs in the republic of letters, that Lousteau thought it necessary C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(3557,23):Lucien felt piqued by Lousteau's complete indifference during the C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(3584,60):At the end, the poet looked up at his Aristarchus. Etienne Lousteau C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(3597,13):within him; Lousteau's inscrutable composure froze his utterance. If C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(3810,41):"Outside the world of letters," Etienne Lousteau continued, "not a C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(3848,38):made appeal to him for a moment; but Lousteau's appalling lamentation C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(3886,1):Lousteau answered coolly. "In short, my dear fellow, in literature you C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(3910,35):"Then, be sure of this," returned Lousteau, "if you have anything in C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(3946,45):upon him, his courage blazed up. He grasped Lousteau's hand. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(3982,55):no difference between d'Arthez's noble friendship and Lousteau's easy C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(3989,12):needs men. Lousteau, seeing that Lucien was resolute, enlisted him as C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(4056,9):Etienne Lousteau wore black trousers and beautifully-varnished boots; C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(4071,21):"There he is," said Lousteau. "Now you will see, my dear fellow, the C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(4075,62):the Norman ex-greengrocer.--Come along, old Tartar!" shouted Lousteau. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(4084,38):"Imprimis, you owe me fifty francs," Lousteau continued. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(4096,44):"Oh! they are in perfect condition," cried Lousteau. "The Travels are C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(4160,14):"Well," said Lousteau, "shall we go on with our business?" C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(4189,19):your paper," said Lousteau. "Stop, there is a superb engraving in the C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(4202,39):"Where are your twenty francs?" asked Lousteau. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(4208,29):"Come, let us be off," said Lousteau, and taking up Lucien's C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(4260,24):"My dear fellow," said Lousteau, "criticism is a kind of brush which C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(4272,61):Lucien's experience confirmed the truth of this particular. Lousteau C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(4512,51):some author's honesty, and turning, he recognized Lousteau. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(4522,1):Lousteau drew Lucien into the shop. "There! that is Finot who edits my C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(4537,57):"But I have a piece on with Ducange at the Gaite," said Lousteau. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(4544,34):a hundred francs?" asked Etienne Lousteau. "We are celebrating C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(4552,1):Lousteau signed his name while the cashier counted out the money; and C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(4571,21):a hand to Finot and Lousteau, and nodded slightly to Vernou. The C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(4577,1):Lousteau. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(4581,46):"Oh, Florine and Matifat the druggist," said Lousteau, "and du Bruel, C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(4591,9):coming, Lousteau?" C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(4604,22):"That's right," said Lousteau, addressing his protege. "That young C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(4612,12):Lucien and Lousteau followed Blondet, Finot, and Vernou, and stood in C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(4633,19):"That is Nathan," Lousteau said in his ear. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(4644,13):an aside to Lousteau.) C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(4656,48):of dining with me to-morrow? Finot is coming.--Lousteau, old man, you C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(4670,51):"And brought him in fifteen hundred francs," said Lousteau for C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(4697,61):standing in the midst of the knot of political celebrities. Lousteau C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(4712,32):Gardens of the Luxembourg, and Lousteau had uttered the cry of a C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(4713,21):wounded eagle; then Lousteau had been a great man in Lucien's eyes, C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(4747,1):Lousteau, and----" C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(4757,29):"One moment, Dauriat," said Lousteau. "I have brought this gentleman C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(4815,29):because you are a friend of Lousteau's my boy," added Dauriat, C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(4878,28):"And the journalist," said Lousteau. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(4885,1):Lousteau. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(4889,29):"Just what I say," answered Lousteau, seeing the knowing smile that C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(4912,2):"Lousteau, I want a word with you," said Finot; "but I shall see you C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(4926,1):Lousteau hurried Lucien away; he had not time to take leave of Vernou C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(4937,8):beside Lousteau. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(4940,16):sous," Etienne Lousteau called to the cabman.--"Dauriat is a rascal C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(4942,61):francs every year. He is a kind of Minister of Literature," Lousteau C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(4984,31):"Do you know d'Arthez?" asked Lousteau. "I know of no more dangerous C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(4995,57):between the resignation preached by the brotherhood and Lousteau's C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(5024,27):is with me," said Etienne Lousteau, and the box-office clerks bowed C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(5036,24):At a sign from Etienne Lousteau, the doorkeeper of the orchestra took C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(5074,36):"So this is the stage," he said to Lousteau. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(5077,31):literary paper," said Etienne Lousteau; "it is a kitchen, neither more C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(5082,34):"What brings you here?" inquired Lousteau. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(5094,2):"Lousteau, dear boy, who is the handsome young man that you have C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(5118,27):Felicien Vernou turned to Lousteau. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(5147,46):"Florville, you will make a bad entry," said Lousteau; "the blacking C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(5157,60):"What did she do? the house is applauding like mad," asked Lousteau. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(5163,32):when you come," said Finot, as Lousteau walked off with Lucien. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(5173,53):be under our table to-morrow morning, I hope, if M. Lousteau has C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(5180,6):"Oh! Lousteau, you dear boy! stop, I must give you a kiss," and she C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(5257,44):"Very well, then, I will look at my friend Lousteau here." C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(5264,12):Lucien and Lousteau were the last to go. Lousteau set a kiss on C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(5293,14):and want; in Lousteau's room he had seen it at its cynical worst; in C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(5343,46):"What is the matter with you?" asked Etienne Lousteau. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(5405,23):"You are lucky," said Lousteau. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(5436,35):"Good-bye till to-morrow evening, Lousteau," said Finot. "You can give C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(5458,38):wiles of these beloved beings," said Lousteau. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(5466,29):lying in the mud," returned Lousteau. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(5475,17):"No! no!" cried Lousteau; "tell Coralie that this gentleman is coming C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(5484,1):Lousteau interrupted Lucien before he had time to finish his C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(5568,40):"My dear fellow, you are a simpleton," Lousteau remarked drily. "Three C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(5589,21):only to say to me, 'Lousteau, let us put an end to So-and-so,' and we C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(5609,16):robbed!" cried Lousteau. "Why, my dear boy, if the minister buys the C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(5631,1):Lousteau went out, and Lucien sat like one bewildered, lost in the C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(5638,1):Lousteau his good fortune; already, for a few moments he had forgotten C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(5745,43):that no one dared approach; I was envying Lousteau just now, but here C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(5753,40):Lucien had quite forgotten Camusot. To Lousteau he had expressed the C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(5758,37):"Coralie is raving about you," said Lousteau as he came in. "Your C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(5801,36):"It is always like this," answered Lousteau. "These ten months that I C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(5811,41):that will never be realized," continued Lousteau. "It is ten o'clock, C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(5829,1):Lousteau's hand was on the lock when du Bruel came in with the C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(5864,43):"Why, Nathan is partly responsible," said Lousteau. "I don't wonder C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(5898,33):"Well! are you coming, my boy?" Lousteau's voice called from the C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(5919,23):Florine, Matifat, and Lousteau. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(6016,36):Lucien at once began to understand Lousteau's indifference to the C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(6060,32):"I have enough for one," added Lousteau. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(6087,21):"And besides," said Lousteau, "Claude Vignon came with Blondet." C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(6220,50):journalism and reveal a fresh and original gift, Lousteau indited an C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(6238,48):brought the art to a curious perfection since. Lousteau compared the C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(6249,25):An hour later, Blondet, Lousteau, and Lucien came back to the drawing- C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(6265,39):clever article against the Romantics; Lousteau's paragraph drew C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(6286,38):"What jokes have you made?" inquired Lousteau, turning to Blondet and C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(6321,17):imposter," said Lousteau. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(6381,54):"Here is a real friend!" he thought, as he looked at Lousteau. It C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(6382,29):never crossed his mind that Lousteau already regarded him as a C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(6386,32):that calibre, had counteracted Lousteau's gnawing jealousy. He C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(6431,21):diplomatique," said Lousteau. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(6450,33):"Thought will make kings," said Lousteau. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(6503,15):Blondet; you, Lousteau; and you, Finot--we are all Platos, Aristides, C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(6614,52):"Do you know what Vignon puts me in mind of?" said Lousteau. "Of one C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(6629,22):obstacles disappear. Lousteau himself (partly from selfish motives) C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(6667,1):Lousteau, sitting beside Camusot, furtively poured cherry-brandy C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(6995,28):Now he understood all that Lousteau's attack had meant. Lousteau had C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(7304,46):Lucien meant to invite Matifat, Florine, and Lousteau (the second C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(7307,1):Lousteau. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(7312,56):Next morning, at eight o'clock, Lucien went to Etienne Lousteau's C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(7313,52):room, found it empty, and hurried away to Florine. Lousteau and C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(7319,15):Vernou," said Lousteau, when they sat at table, and Lucien had C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(7346,50):"The bargain, the great business, is concluded," Lousteau continued. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(7360,41):of his whole druggist's career," put in Lousteau. "He said, 'This C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(7366,11):continued Lousteau. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(7375,49):"Haven't I been in Paris for three years?" said Lousteau, "and only C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(7385,20):for you," retorted Lousteau, somewhat nettled, "but I won't answer for C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(7395,1):Lousteau sent for a cab, and the pair of friends drove to Vernou's C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(7408,24):"Have you breakfasted, Lousteau?" he asked, placing a chair for C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(7437,31):"Yes and no," replied Etienne Lousteau. "It is a supper, old chap." C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(7461,19):"Well," continued Lousteau, "you are coming; but that is not all. M. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(7471,52):"Very well--good-bye till to-morrow, my boy," said Lousteau, shaking C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(7480,34):"We will get up a success," said Lousteau, and he rose with a bow to C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(7544,31):"Ah! we are infatuated," said Lousteau. "What a mistake! Do as I do C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(7549,47):"Well, there is no damning a devil," retorted Lousteau. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(7558,8):there. Lousteau was right. The infatuation of desire was upon Lucien; C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(7771,23):"Is my agreement with Lousteau made out in duplicate and ready to C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(7777,1):Lousteau will be bound by the previous contract." C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(7783,22):myself, and to-night Lousteau will go round with you to the theatres. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(7785,14):of ours with Lousteau as its editor, so try to keep well with him. The C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(7815,56):seated in various chairs and lounges Lucien discovered Lousteau, C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(7824,28):installation of our friend Lousteau in my place as editor of the C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(7835,39):"Who put that into your mouth?" asked Lousteau. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(7845,11):with him, Lousteau." C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(7858,17):"Ah, yes!" said Lousteau; "but the paper must keep on its lines. M. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(7877,27):"Give it to Lucien," said Lousteau. "Hector and Vernou will write C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(7884,26):army of journalists, and Lousteau explained that they could be sure of C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(7902,53):an understanding; you shall hear why," said Etienne Lousteau. "We C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(7915,59):"They are all right, gentlemen; I give you my word," said Lousteau. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(7969,11):suggested Lousteau. "We might say that M. de Bonald has sweaty feet." C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(7975,1):Lousteau; "you could indulge any little private grudges of your own. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(8005,23):"In journalism," said Lousteau, "everything that is probable is true. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(8016,24):himself," said Etienne Lousteau, as they came downstairs. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(8023,60):On the ground floor they found Finot. He stepped across to Lousteau C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(8032,9):Etienne Lousteau wanted his share of the blackmail levied by C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(8037,24):o'clock," said Etienne Lousteau. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(8119,22):to be exploited, and Lousteau, who considered that he had proprietary C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(8120,45):rights in the poet, looked glad to see him. Lousteau had begun already C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(8131,1):Lousteau, now an editor. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(8151,1):Lousteau, your friend, has a poem put away somewhere among his old C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(8153,10):of once, Lousteau?" inquired Dauriat, with a knowing glance at the C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(8156,54):"How should I be writing prose otherwise, eh?" asked Lousteau. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(8177,53):"You know that he is on the paper, Dauriat?" put in Lousteau. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(8186,13):Dauriat and Lousteau laughed. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(8188,17):"Oh dear!" said Lousteau, "there be illusions left." C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(8202,57):that Dauriat had read his Marguerites. He went out with Lousteau, C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(8204,50):them into the shop, talking of his newspaper and Lousteau's daily, C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(8208,20):one else?" Etienne Lousteau snatched an opportunity to whisper. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(8229,1):Lousteau followed. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(8247,46):"Oh, I say! you must learn your trade," said Lousteau, laughing. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(8346,37):Lucien was amazed at this talk from Lousteau. As the journalist spoke, C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(8353,7):asked Lousteau. "That is the first manner of demolishing a book, my C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(8370,9):Etienne Lousteau's cruel lesson opened up possibilities for Lucien's C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(8373,33):"Let us go to the office," said Lousteau; "we shall find our friends C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(8389,55):At the head of the "Facetiae" in the morning's paper, Lousteau C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(8396,1):Lousteau's words had been like a torch for burning; Lucien's hot C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(8415,60):"There was no need to do more than show you the way," said Lousteau. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(8424,42):"Blondet and Vignon will feel bad," said Lousteau. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(8429,22):"Read it over," said Lousteau, and Lucien read the first of the C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(8439,35):"You are a born journalist," said Lousteau. "It shall go in to-morrow. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(8450,61):"Dauriat will be dumfounded by the article on Nathan," said Lousteau. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(8474,19):the scenes," said Lousteau. "And then we will go to the Panorama- C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(8500,23):"It is serious," said Lousteau. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(8877,1):Lousteau called with Hector Merlin and Vernou. Lucien was immensely C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(8889,61):"You do not mean to make an enemy of Nathan, do you?" asked Lousteau. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(8904,37):"You article was not signed," added Lousteau. "Felicien, not being C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(8953,19):criticism?" asked Lousteau. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(9084,1):Lousteau, Lucien and Coralie, Blondet and Finot, were to dine at the C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(9246,40):shaped itself in his mind--Was Etienne Lousteau sorry that he had C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(9292,39):determined to have a word or two with Lousteau. He had already begun C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(9298,5):for Lousteau's newspaper. Inexperienced journalists, in the first C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(9304,52):the evening. There were to be cards before supper. Lousteau came for C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(9308,57):whimsicalities which made the fortune of the paper, and Lousteau C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(9316,16):"I?" exclaimed Lousteau. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(9333,7):cried Lousteau. "Besides, my boy, what grudge had you against the C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(9341,14):"Good," said Lousteau. "I shall let him see your article, and tell him C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(9354,17):"Really!" cried Lousteau, "where do you come from? For what do you C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(9406,1):Lousteau gave this explanation in a low voice as they went up the C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(9413,1):Lousteau, the dealer in orders and tickets rose from a sturdy chair C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(9457,61):"But let us settle this business about the tickets," put in Lousteau. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(9466,16):"No, no," said Lousteau; "we will keep that shift against a rainy C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(9477,36):"But Braulard is an epicure," said Lousteau; "his dinners are famous C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(9495,30):"Behold the Romans!" laughed Lousteau; "behold fame incarnate for C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(9507,1):Lousteau, Finot, Nathan, Hector Merlin and Mme. du Val-Noble, Felicien C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(9578,45):When they went back to the others, Florine, Lousteau, Matifat, and C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(9582,49):Lucien was unacquainted with a single game, but Lousteau lost a C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(9662,32):lowered themselves in the end. Lousteau, Merlin, and Finot took up the C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(9666,6):said Lousteau. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(9706,33):"We have a case in point," said Lousteau. "Dauriat will sell a couple C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(9720,21):preceded it?" asked Lousteau. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(9748,19):"Gentlemen," said Lousteau, "we have been eye-witnesses of a strange, C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(9781,44):"Fulgence used to be a good fellow," added Lousteau, "before they C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(9813,1):Lousteau; "it is all their doing----" C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(9821,15):"Pshaw!" said Lousteau; "he will be a great physician anyhow." C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(9861,1):Lousteau. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(10164,56):Lucien burst out laughing; he thought of his talk with Lousteau that C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(10168,1):Lousteau, a newspaper hack who sees a five-franc piece in a column. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(10169,1):Lousteau's politics consist in a belief that Napoleon will return, and C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(10565,55):for an amount of four thousand francs. Lucien went to Lousteau and C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(10567,19):gaming debts; but Lousteau showed him certain pieces of stamped paper, C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(10568,54):which proved that Florine was in much the same case. Lousteau was C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(10574,32):"The Matifat took alarm," said Lousteau. "We have lost him; but if C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(10588,1):Lousteau's newspaper was of service now to Coralie and Lucien, little C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(10593,9):Etienne Lousteau broke in upon their breakfast with a shout of C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(10647,32):Lucien's old quarter of Paris. Lousteau still kept his room in the Rue C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(10654,14):described by Lousteau on that memorable evening as they went to the C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(10658,39):rejoicing to make all he could out of Lousteau before turning his back C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(10660,30):in good stead in future. And Lousteau, on his side, was privately C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(10749,12):Lucien and Lousteau. "I have read the work, it is very literary, and C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(10799,21):"That's true," said Lousteau. Wine had got the better of prudence, and C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(10813,23):"A mere trifle," said Lousteau. "A thousand crowns would pull me C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(10895,17):"Not she!" said Lousteau. "Coralie is not clever, but she is not quite C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(10909,32):"It is better than that," said Lousteau; "it is your money or your C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(10976,1):Lousteau. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(11000,30):"That will do, Barbet," said Lousteau. "Can you tell us of a bill- C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(11050,34):broker. The words slid down upon Lousteau's suggestion like the blade C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(11159,44):"What queer business are you up to?" asked Lousteau of the artist, an C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(11172,19):"And sou by sou," Lousteau said with a laugh. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(11186,1):Lousteau, watching Lucien, saw him take up his bills, and dash out C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(11212,1):Lousteau, "you must exchange them for hard cash." C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(11217,19):disgusted," added Lousteau, as Lucien cut him short with a start. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(11223,29):"Here is more folly!" cried Lousteau. "You will not keep your C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(11246,10):despair, Lousteau stopped and looked into Lucien's flushed, excited C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(11263,40):him one by one. He handed ten louis to Lousteau. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(11267,1):Lousteau took the hint and went to order dinner. Lucien, left alone, C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(11277,10):He found Lousteau at Very's, and flung himself upon the cookery (to C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(11545,59):besides a private understanding between them; but Etienne Lousteau C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(11550,50):charms, and much at a loss how to rid himself of Lousteau his rival, C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(11559,1):Lousteau pretty thoroughly. Lousteau's courses were weakening his C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(11570,1):Lousteau was terribly overcome. He wept (towards the close of a dinner C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(11591,46):sixth share for fifteen thousand francs, and Lousteau consequently C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(11621,38):fraternized unblushingly with Finot, Lousteau, and Vernou, and the C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(11629,43):gown, in the greenroom of the Vaudeville. Lousteau, in time, shook C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(11698,48):"You then and there made two mortal enemies of Lousteau and Nathan," C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(11730,19):plan, and Etienne Lousteau, who had confided so much to him, knew his C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(11816,36):"He is under contract to write for Lousteau's paper, and we can the C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(11869,33):you have made a deadly enemy of Lousteau; he is thirsting for your C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(12317,37):breakfasted together, Lucien opened Lousteau's newspaper, and found C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(12618,25):compelled Lucien to ask Lousteau for a return of the loan of a C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(12623,1):Lousteau was not to be found in the Rue de la Harpe. Hunted down like C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(12627,34):forsook d'Arthez for journalism. Lousteau offered him dinner, and C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(12636,1):Lousteau borrowed forty francs of him, and divided the money into four C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(12646,1):Lousteau hurried to the Palais Royal to gamble with his remaining nine C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(12756,37):evening, not so very long ago, when Lousteau had told him of the C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\adpap10.txt(13224,1):Lousteau, Etienne C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\arcis10.txt(12860,8):Finot, Lousteau, Felicien Vernon, Theodore Gaillard, Hector Merlin, C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\arcis10.txt(13156,58):assembled; but presently recognizing Felicien Vernou and Lousteau, two C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\arcis10.txt(13250,1):Lousteau went up to Sir Francis Drake and reproached him for wishing C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\brthr10.txt(158,48):Doctor Rouget and his intimate friend Monsieur Lousteau, a former sub- C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\brthr10.txt(163,46):man, had been heard to exclaim that Monsieur Lousteau should die by C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\brthr10.txt(166,1):Lousteau and his family left Issoudun, and never returned there. After C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\brthr10.txt(1948,44):Mazarin. Giroudeau, Finot, Bixiou, Vernou, Lousteau, saw him leading a C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\brthr10.txt(3256,16):friends, named Lousteau, the son of that very sub-delegate of Issoudun C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\brthr10.txt(3651,26):Maximilienne Hochon, nee Lousteau. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\brthr10.txt(4107,33):natural son of the sub-delegate Lousteau, that brother of Madame C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\brthr10.txt(4117,56):enmity, and very fortunately for the child, Rouget and Lousteau never C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\brthr10.txt(4132,26):despised. Madame Hochon, Lousteau's sister, paid sixty francs a year C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\brthr10.txt(4140,47):him, at the seminary, up to the year 1805. As Lousteau died in 1800, C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\brthr10.txt(4653,49):general opinion of the left-handed parentage of Lousteau, looked upon C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\brthr10.txt(4819,18):"The deuce! Pere Lousteau loved Madame Rouget; isn't it better to love C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\brthr10.txt(5170,60):"Bah! don't talk nonsense! After such a life as Rouget and Lousteau C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\brthr10.txt(6371,37):sister of the sub-delegate, the gay Lousteau, exchanging his office at C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\brthr10.txt(6412,5):nee Lousteau, his grandson Borniche with a sister Adolphine, the heirs C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\brthr10.txt(6447,50):among rich people to learn a trade, and Monsieur Lousteau, the father, C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\brthr10.txt(6471,53):but after all, the Rouget money is bound to go to a Lousteau." C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\brthr10.txt(6837,52):announced the approach of the Borniche, Beaussier, Lousteau-Prangin, C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\brthr10.txt(6875,45):Mesdames Borniche, Goddet-Herau, Beaussier, Lousteau-Prangin and C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\brthr10.txt(7410,1):Lousteau, one of the court judges, and the Mayor of Issoudun were C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\brthr10.txt(7952,1):Lousteau-Prangin, son of a judge, a distant relation to the family of C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\brthr10.txt(7968,11):Thereupon Lousteau-Prangin ran off to his father, the judge. Max was C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\brthr10.txt(8054,61):which is at the farther end of the Petite-Narette. Monsieur Lousteau- C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\brthr10.txt(8066,16):Mouilleron and Lousteau-Prangin, accompanied by the lieutenant of C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\brthr10.txt(8128,40):so much affection in this town?" asked Lousteau-Prangin. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\brthr10.txt(8166,43):"Send one of your men for my clerk," said Lousteau-Prangin to the C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\brthr10.txt(8180,1):Lousteau. "No one,--neither a jealous husband nor anybody else; for C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\brthr10.txt(8272,43):himself in the private office of Monsieur Lousteau-Prangin. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\brthr10.txt(8275,42):addressing Monsieur Mouilleron, Monsieur Lousteau-Prangin, and the C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\brthr10.txt(8357,48):By the time this letter was received, Monsieur Lousteau-Prangin had C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\brthr10.txt(8804,26):mentioned the journalist Lousteau, nephew of the old lady, as a "rara C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\brthr10.txt(8806,13):the name of Lousteau would become celebrated. He did not hesitate to C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\brthr10.txt(10666,18):finally given up Lousteau and taken Nathan. That shrewd pair have C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\brthr10.txt(11415,49):to get rid of his wife. You know our old friend Lousteau? well, C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\brthr10.txt(11895,1):Lousteau, Etienne C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\btrix10.txt(33,34):imagined: Jules Janin in Etienne Lousteau, Armand Carrel in Michel C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\btrix10.txt(3351,43):by, and does not go to work. Like Etienne Lousteau the feuilletonist, C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\btrix10.txt(11088,1):Lousteau for five hundred francs, was boldly pronounced to be his own C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\btrix10.txt(11368,21):Finot, Couture, and Lousteau should gossip beside him. Finot, whose C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\btrix10.txt(11374,39):Couture, well manoeuvred by Finot and Lousteau (Lousteau being, though C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\btrix10.txt(11886,59):meet Madame de la Baudraye, a charming woman, a friend of Lousteau. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\btrix10.txt(12723,1):Lousteau, Etienne C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\cbtty10.txt(2993,33):Monsieur Leon de Lora, Monsieur Lousteau, Monsieur de Vernisset, C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\cbtty10.txt(6062,23):of her elopement with Lousteau. Some, again, are led astray by the C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\cbtty10.txt(15678,1):Lousteau, Vernisset, Leon de Lora, Vernou, all the wittiest men in C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\cbtty10.txt(15930,23):Bixiou, Leon de Lora, Lousteau, Florine, Mademoiselle Heloise C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\cbtty10.txt(16071,1):Lousteau, the literary cadger, la Palferine and Malaga, Massol, C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\cbtty10.txt(16181,31):between the Duc d'Herouville, Lousteau, Josepha, Jenny Cadine, and C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\cbtty10.txt(16195,60):Massol has a minister's portfolio in the place of a heart; Lousteau C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\cbtty10.txt(16240,62):"Three groans for such a good dog! Hurrah for Brazil!" cried Lousteau. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\cbtty10.txt(16300,35):lamented King of Holland!--I say, Lousteau, Bixiou, Massol, all the C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\cbtty10.txt(18311,1):Lousteau, Etienne C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\doeve10.txt(1870,55):to a bourgeoise; thither came Blondet, Finot, Etienne Lousteau, Vernou C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\doeve10.txt(2067,24):here to supper Etienne Lousteau, who can do the feuilleton; Claude C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\doeve10.txt(2770,37):of his staff of editors, of Etienne Lousteau the feuilletonist, whom C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\doeve10.txt(2990,1):Lousteau (envier par excellence):-- C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\doeve10.txt(2995,20):"He? never!" cried Lousteau. "He has Florine." C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\doeve10.txt(3153,54):of his misfortune on the usurer. Rastignac, Blondet, Lousteau, Vernou, C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\doeve10.txt(4565,1):Lousteau, Etienne C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\evdvd10.txt(1627,59):Naturally he took counsel of his friends. But by the time Lousteau, C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\evdvd10.txt(4843,56):went to his room, and indited the following epistle to Lousteau:-- C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\evdvd10.txt(4845,11):Lucien to Lousteau. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\evdvd10.txt(4895,24):"Joking apart, my dear Lousteau, I am in serious difficulties, as C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\evdvd10.txt(4939,6):"Ah! Lousteau, all your treasons are forgiven," he said to himself, as C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\evdvd10.txt(4941,55):had been sent. Inside the hatbox he found a note from Lousteau:-- C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\evdvd10.txt(6370,22):match for Blondet or Lousteau." C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\lsbrg10.txt(13704,1):Lousteau. [See "The Great Man of the Provinces in Paris."] C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\lsbrg10.txt(13706,9):Etienne Lousteau! la Peyrade had an idea that he had heard the name C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\lsbrg10.txt(13734,17):"So," continued Lousteau, "all parliamentary ambitions will take the C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\lsbrg10.txt(13749,29):"Better than that," replied Lousteau. "I have come to propose to C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\lsbrg10.txt(13760,9):Etienne Lousteau bowed his thanks, and then said: C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\lsbrg10.txt(13776,17):"That," replied Lousteau, "is a point we did not consider; we were not C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\lsbrg10.txt(13788,1):Lousteau, dogmatically. "In that case, subscribers are, on the C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\lsbrg10.txt(13800,30):"Before answering," returned Lousteau, "I shall ask you another C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\lsbrg10.txt(13811,15):"No," replied Lousteau. "I have told you we should be reasonable; C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\lsbrg10.txt(13820,12):"No," said Lousteau, "to-morrow I will come here, at the same hour, if C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\lsbrg10.txt(14170,30):For this reason when Etienne Lousteau went to la Peyrade, a former C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\lsbrg10.txt(14191,47):This horizon, rapidly taken in during Etienne Lousteau's visit, had C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\lsbrg10.txt(14197,44):for five hundred francs, for which Etienne Lousteau never clearly C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\lsbrg10.txt(19865,1):Lousteau, Etienne C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\mnbus10.txt(67,28):Bixiou of the caricatures, Lousteau the journalist, Nathan, and C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\mnbus10.txt(87,9):Bixiou, Lousteau, Nathan, and young La Palferine. And they on their C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\mnbus10.txt(144,35):Nathan, Bixiou, La Palferine, and Lousteau, "but the king of the C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\mnbus10.txt(152,30):was one continual war, like--Lousteau's, for instance. I was, and am C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\mnbus10.txt(349,34):"What a picture of a Dun!" cried Lousteau. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\mnbus10.txt(957,1):Lousteau, Etienne C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(124,35):author of secondary rank, Etienne Lousteau, one of our most successful C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(154,48):for one, and of fashion for the other. Etienne Lousteau, a writer in C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(1401,59):College, nor those of his deceased schoolfellows, such as Lousteau, C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(1428,1):Lousteau, warned by his fellow-schoolfellows, who could not remember C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(1574,1):Lousteau, who was regarded as a lady's man of the first water in C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(1582,21):the departed Madame Lousteau to stir up the journalist's ambitions by C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(1590,9):Neither Lousteau nor Bianchon replied; they were waiting perhaps till C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(1598,1):Lousteau to his companion, in the slang of the stage. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(1600,10):In 1836, Lousteau, worn by sixteen years of struggle in the Capital, C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(1659,19):"How is it," said Lousteau, the practical joker, "that so handsome a C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(1707,24):Gatien Boirouge nudged Lousteau's elbow, with a glance and a smile, C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(1712,21):"But, madame," said Lousteau, "you are proving that we are still in C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(1718,21):"And why not?" said Lousteau. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(1731,59):gesture, raising herself above provincial absurdities and Lousteau's C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(1749,22):"That is true," said Lousteau. "There is in a country-bred woman's C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(1763,50):"The provincial women I have met in Paris," said Lousteau, "were, in C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(1786,41):of French states into one empire?" said Lousteau. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(1797,33):"The English aristocracy," said Lousteau, hastening to put a word in, C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(1811,15):"Hence," said Lousteau, hoping to stop this nimble tongue by an C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(1825,24):"Well," said Gatien to Lousteau, "what do you think of her?" C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(1832,56):"Forgive me, I forgot you were in love with her," said Lousteau. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(1846,1):Lousteau again. Have you never observed what great meanness may be C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(1850,40):unuttered poetry, who to get away from Lousteau had climbed the C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(1886,17):The doctor made Lousteau smile by showing him this sentence on the C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(1896,48):Monarchy," Desplein's great pupil whispered to Lousteau, and he wrote C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(1908,16):on, turning to Lousteau, "whether it is taking an unfair advantage of C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(1948,24):"Horace is right, said Lousteau. "I cannot imagine why you trouble C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(1952,35):Horace Bianchon looked at Etienne Lousteau, as much as to say that C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(1977,6):said Lousteau. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(1990,48):"But what interest have you in all this?" said Lousteau. "If she is in C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(2008,16):"Horace," said Lousteau, "look here, O learned interpreter of human C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(2024,30):"I know a newspaper editor," Lousteau went on, addressing Gatien, C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(2043,14):quake," said Lousteau. "Young man--and you too, Bianchon--let me beg C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(2050,38):The evening began with a triumph for Lousteau, who returned the album C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(2091,9):ETIENNE LOUSTEAU. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(2105,1):Lousteau, in a tone of deep dejection. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(2121,1):Lousteau. "For some charity lottery, perhaps?" C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(2128,39):"Can there be any indiscretion," said Lousteau, "in inquiring who the C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(2230,52):"You are paining them very much," said Bianchon to Lousteau in an C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(2241,54):"You are very right, my dear Monsieur Gravier," said Lousteau. "I C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(2254,1):Lousteau. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(2483,50):"Let us hear," said the audience, at a sign from Lousteau, conveying C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(2822,43):"You must tell that to the marines!" said Lousteau. "It needs their C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(2862,30):Monsieur Gravier, nettled by Lousteau's impertinent tone. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(2875,17):enacted," cried Lousteau. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(2946,24):"But, after all," said Lousteau, "our hostess' serenity may indicate C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(2977,34):"Are they the same hairs?" asked Lousteau. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(2981,39):"This quite alters the matter!" cried Lousteau. "You have been beating C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(2993,49):out against the besiegers of Sancerre smiled on Lousteau. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(3034,35):By opening the game in this tone, Lousteau cut out all excursions in C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(3052,36):"It seems to me unlikely," replied Lousteau. "I can still believe in C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(3065,1):Lousteau and Bianchon, who told her strange tales about the great men C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(3070,12):Of course, Lousteau spoke very ill of the great female celebrity of Le C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(3089,40):assembly as one of her great triumphs. Lousteau, Bianchon, and Dinah C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(3112,42):In the first excitement of this success, Lousteau introduced the great C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(3125,17):women stared at Lousteau as if he were a mountebank. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(3127,50):"Monsieur Gatien Boirouge declares that Monsieur Lousteau makes twenty C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(3133,56):"Monsieur Gatien," said Madame Chandier, "get Monsieur Lousteau to C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(3143,1):Lousteau began to feel that he was too much on show, and saw in the C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(3171,31):murmur like an impatient pit, Lousteau observed that Bianchon was lost C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(3180,20):"Let us see," said Lousteau, taking the sheet the doctor held out to C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(3208,37):"That is the end of the page," said Lousteau, to whom every one had C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(3260,50):"Devil take it! Our Rinaldo has vanished!" cried Lousteau. "But a C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(3276,1):Lousteau. "And this Cavaliere Paluzzi--what a man!--The style is weak C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(3294,1):Lousteau." C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(3296,1):Lousteau looked at the two women, two Indian idols, and contrived to C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(3329,14):gazing up at Lousteau, "I see how the story is progressing. I know it C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(3335,25):"Can you see her," said Lousteau, "clasping Monsieur Adolphe in her C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(3355,1):Lousteau went on:-- C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(3383,16):"Guess!" cried Lousteau. "The corresponding page is not here. We must C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(3407,58):Normand, and cut by Duplat.--the names are signed," said Lousteau. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(3411,40):"That is the end of the chapter," said Lousteau. "The fact of this C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(3423,17):"You see," said Lousteau, "the waste sheet has been printed fair on C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(3443,17):"Capital!" said Lousteau, "and it is complete and uninjured. It is C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(3499,37):Doguereau, were the printers," said Lousteau, "for they employed C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(3510,38):"It may be by Madame Hadot," replied Lousteau. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(3526,53):"I beg you to go on," said Madame de la Baudraye to Lousteau. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(3528,1):Lousteau went on saying: "Page 218. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(3553,16):our own!" said Lousteau, "and here it was already known to the C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(3570,44):"Well, then I will read straight on," said Lousteau solemnly. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(3703,32):"Pray excuse me, ladies," said Lousteau, "but I find it impossible to C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(3724,49):"So those are the airs you affect?"[*] retorted Lousteau. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(3732,6):"Ah! Lousteau! vous vous donnez de ces R-la (airs-la)." C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(3744,13):"Nowadays," Lousteau went on, "a novelist draws characters, and C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(3772,36):To the despair of all the company, Lousteau went on with the made-up C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(3936,21):"That is all," said Lousteau, "for the foreman has torn off the rest C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(3945,57):"And yet it is a novel of the time of the Empire," said Lousteau. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(3963,34):"Well, Monsieur de Clagny," said Lousteau, "we were talking yesterday C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(3998,19):some spunk," said Lousteau. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(4015,18):proprieties than Lousteau had done to Dinah's significant warnings on C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(4018,58):Any other man than Bianchon would have been surprised at Lousteau's C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(4028,18):of encroachment. Lousteau, a poet and journalist, and a libertine with C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(4046,50):to as to Madame de la Baudraye in a few words to Lousteau, to the C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(4050,60):the Sancerre circle, who could not in the least understand Lousteau's C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(4065,1):Lousteau could not fail to see Dinah's great superiority over the best C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(4070,29):Paris faded from his brain; Lousteau was accepting the provincial C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(4091,1):Lousteau's comments on the paper wrapped round the proofs. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(4093,36):"My dear fellow," said Bianchon to Lousteau as they went to bed--they C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(4108,1):Lousteau, "that there may be some truth in all those hypotheses. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(4118,1):Lousteau, rolling himself up in the bed-clothes, "and to-morrow, with C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(4126,12):mother and Lousteau, but she intended to drop her mother at La C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(4131,39):lace bonnet with flowers in it. As to Lousteau, the wretch had assumed C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(4194,12):have done. Lousteau watched the effects of this clever manoeuvre, to C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(4203,41):on to Cosne alone with the two friends. Lousteau took his seat by the C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(4207,8):served Lousteau well by making fun of the Public Prosecutor, of C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(4227,27):"Forgive my friend," said Lousteau, half jestingly. "He is always the C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(4245,62):physician had explained by a single wink that he meant to do Lousteau C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(4252,59):you to live at Sancerre.--Take a lofty view of life. Make Lousteau C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(4265,51):compete with a journalist's mistresses?--Monsieur Lousteau strikes me C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(4284,1):Lousteau to draw it into his, with a tender look, as he pressed it to C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(4291,1):Lousteau to himself, "the only stuff which shows every crease. This C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(4296,7):While Lousteau was wondering whether Dinah had put on a muslin gown on C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(4306,30):"Good-bye--great man!" cried Lousteau, shaking hands with Bianchon. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(4315,23):Victory might gratify Lousteau, but defeat could cause him no grief. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(4332,49):for any woman the passion I have for you!" said Lousteau in her ear. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(4349,45):a little of Madame de la Baudraye's esteem, Lousteau did his best to C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(4362,36):"Go quickly to La Baudraye," cried Lousteau to the coachman. "Madame C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(4372,1):Lousteau. The journalist put on his most ingratiating tone, and talked C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(4378,6):said Lousteau, who had followed her. And he threw himself at her feet. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(4391,50):"There are no papers at the inn," said Gatien to Lousteau, who went C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(4394,60):"And you found none at the Chateau d'Anzy either?" replied Lousteau. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(4399,21):"Quite so," replied Lousteau. "Madame de la Baudraye was greatly C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(4405,51):'Manuscript.'--Will the horse get over it?" asked Lousteau with a C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(4412,1):Lousteau. It would have been too rash for Dinah to seem cold or severe C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(4413,4):to Lousteau in Gatien's presence; and Etienne, taking advantage of C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(4423,1):Lousteau was forcing her to a decision. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(4425,1):Lousteau handed the mother into the chaise, he helped Madame de la C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(4432,1):Lousteau. "Bianchon advised her to put on a warm dress." C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(4438,1):Lousteau. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(4443,54):"We were in such good spirits when we set out," said Lousteau; "now C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(4452,15):Dinah allowed Lousteau to talk without even looking at him; but at C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(4457,7):crown Lousteau's joy; his wit flowed more freely, and at last he made C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(4485,52):brass nail and was torn all the way down," replied Lousteau. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(4495,19):return from Cosne Lousteau had been alone with Dinah, and even more so C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(4501,27):remained with her mother, Lousteau, and her husband. The annoyance C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(4529,32):and he maintained that she and Lousteau were engaged together on some C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(4537,49):dormant qualities, hitherto in abeyance. To her Lousteau seemed an C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(4544,1):Lousteau found in Madame de la Baudraye an artlessness, nay, if you C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(4547,1):Lousteau was quite alive to a form of flattery which in most women is C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(4555,22):Men who have reached Lousteau's age try to distribute the "movements" C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(4556,58):of this repertoire through the whole opera of a passion. Lousteau, C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(4572,1):Lousteau, however, had not time to repeat himself, for he was to leave C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(4578,35):"What are you going to do?" asked Lousteau. "What is to be done to the C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(4582,1):Lousteau, the local artist, and Dinah out on the terrace. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(4608,20):This allusion made Lousteau smile; he did not understand Monsieur de C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(4618,60):Dinah, with superiority of the Superior Woman, accompanied Lousteau, C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(4624,23):"I owe it to Monsieur Lousteau that I discovered that I had not been C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(4636,21):In Paris once more, Lousteau had, in a few weeks, lost the impression C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(4638,1):Lousteau lived by his pen. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(4660,6):pen. Lousteau, a thorough man about town, lived at scarcely any C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(4679,22):impecunious. Indeed, Lousteau found himself now just as hard up as C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(4683,46):The cause of this phenomenon was as follows: Lousteau lived in the Rue C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(4689,52):The rent and the porter's account cleaned him out. Lousteau took no C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(4699,48):and as much bored by amusement as a courtesan, Lousteau would get out C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(4717,1):Lousteau, the man of her heart. Like all those women who get the name C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(4720,12):throw from Lousteau. This lady took a pride and delight in teasing her C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(4723,18):These details of Lousteau's life and fortune are indispensable, for C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(4734,1):Lousteau. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(4746,59):"Your joke is as stupid as my Muse is handsome," retorted Lousteau. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(4751,18):On the tenth day Lousteau received a letter with the Sancerre post- C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(4754,25):"Good! very good!" said Lousteau. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(4763,1):Lousteau to himself, as he threw the ten sheets of paper into the fire C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(4766,1):Lousteau was not much afraid of Madame Schontz, who really loved him C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(4773,15):A week later, Lousteau, who hardly remembered Dinah, was startled by C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(4792,46):courtesan, opening one of the hampers, while Lousteau was writing his C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(4800,1):Lousteau wrote to Dinah; but instead of writing from the heart, he was C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(4812,24):By the end of December Lousteau had ceased to read Dinah's letters; C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(4816,35):Then one of those chances came to Lousteau which such bohemians ought C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(4871,13):"Yes," said Lousteau, "old Camusot married little Daddy Cardot's C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(4918,43):"You shall have my reply to-morrow," said Lousteau. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(4924,1):Lousteau spent the evening in writing a long letter to the Marquise, C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(4932,1):Lousteau, who at first had been on some ceremony with himself, by next C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(4948,53):Maitre Cardot appreciated this profession of faith. Lousteau had laid C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(4952,15):following day Lousteau was introduced to the Cardot family as the C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(4962,42):dining-room was like Harpagon's. Even if Lousteau had not known all C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(4970,19):twelve years old. Lousteau, assuming a little Jesuitical air, played C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(4975,39):Felicie Cardot, who had been watching Lousteau out of the corner of C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(4982,1):Lousteau was touched; there was so much expression in her look, her C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(5028,1):Lousteau had already given himself the airs of a person of importance; C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(5041,29):that time bringing out, and Lousteau had taken the first numbers for C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(5046,41):would tell her more, she thought, as to Lousteau's habits of life than C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(5054,1):Lousteau, clever as he was, did not think it strange that the wife of C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(5064,8):seeing Lousteau's rooms. These domiciliary visitations are not unusual C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(5067,22):presence of Monsieur Lousteau's future mother-in-law and bride, handed C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(5074,10):Martyrs, Lousteau happened to look at a hired coach that was toiling C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(5085,26):"Certainly I have," said Lousteau. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(5106,20):"Well, well!" said Lousteau, dragging Dinah along. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(5142,1):Lousteau could not resist this distress. He clasped the Baroness in C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(5166,1):Lousteau, who was not lacking in the sort of decision which grows out C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(5210,5):"E. LOUSTEAU." C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(5215,24):artists, a /"charge"/--Lousteau made a great show of settling the Muse C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(5238,49):of some plate, telling her what had happened to Lousteau. After making C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(5247,19):their coffee, and Lousteau was sitting in front of the fire, Dinah on C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(5261,31):"Who talks of marrying?" said Lousteau. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(5290,2):"Lousteau, listen to me. That a passion should lead you to forget to C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(5301,25):kicking enough!' " said Lousteau, laughing. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(5368,34):"You won't understand me," cried Lousteau, in a voice of exasperation. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(5380,12):you," said Lousteau, opening the door of the bedroom, where he found C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(5388,26):"Darling angel," replied Lousteau, taking Dinah in his arms, lifting C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(5403,34):Pamela flew in, and whispered in Lousteau's ear: C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(5407,1):Lousteau rose, leaving Dinah on the sofa, and went out. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(5415,26):"Mean wretch!" exclaimed Lousteau. "What! in two hours he has made up C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(5461,1):Lousteau was ready to sweeten his vows with the most fascinating C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(5465,23):succession of shocks, Lousteau had remembered little De la Baudraye's C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(5476,1):Lousteau; but the proofs of devotion her lover had given her by giving C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(5483,1):Lousteau, on his part, anxious to make Dinah feel herself dependent on C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(5491,26):satirically described by Lousteau to Madame de la Baudraye--a fact C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(5506,1):Lousteau, who was excessively vain, educated Dinah, took her to the C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(5510,1):Lousteau, when his friends met him, was congratulated on his conquest. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(5526,42):One morning, as she read the papers, for Lousteau had them all, two C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(5554,29):To this sweet exaggeration, Lousteau would reply: C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(5561,19):"Supreme," echoed Lousteau. "Come, now? Suppose I am dragged away to a C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(5571,1):Lousteau. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(5575,1):Lousteau proposed that they should each write a letter setting forth C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(5590,59):ambitious souls, which formed the basis of her character. Lousteau C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(5610,42):arrived at such a pitch of affection for Lousteau that she gloried in C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(5623,36):other. At the end of the first act Lousteau left his seat, abandoning C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(5659,9):Etienne Lousteau's mistress, that you live together as man and wife!-- C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(5700,32):for a more celebrated man than Lousteau--for Nathan--and now they do C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(5734,35):"What ails you, my Didine?" asked Lousteau. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(5748,31):later she observed a cloud on Lousteau's brow as he walked round the C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(5767,55):of her illness, and joyfully presented the sum due to Lousteau, who C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(5783,43):exclaimed, as she looked through the bill Lousteau showed her. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(5786,34):a restaurant or by a cook," said Lousteau. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(5831,53):performance, had very plainly shown the lawyer what Lousteau's purpose C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(5840,16):situation, and Lousteau made them doubly charming by the ingratiating C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(5844,58):sentiment is so easy that the actor is not detected; and Lousteau's C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(5849,45):confinement, she discovered why it was that Lousteau had not triumphed C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(5869,29):abuse of smoking encouraged Lousteau's indolence. Tobacco, which can C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(5897,42):Madame de la Baudraye could smile to see Lousteau with one article on C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(5910,37):stand on. Between Claude Vignon and Lousteau lay the gulf that divides C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(5915,5):saw Lousteau working up to the last minute under the most C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(5920,34):existence, she also guessed that Lousteau's pen could never be trusted C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(5934,1):Lousteau picked up this letter and read it. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(5940,17):were engaged at Lousteau's; for he, ever since little La Baudraye's C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(5944,24):magistrate feared lest Lousteau should commit some compromising C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(5955,19):"Monsieur Etienne Lousteau has the pleasure of informing you of C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(5960,1):Lousteau had already sent out sixty of these announcements when C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(5962,37):list of persons at Sancerre to whom Lousteau proposed to send this C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(5966,28):her on no account to allow Lousteau to carry on this atrocious jest, C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(5998,50):cannot afford to lay down. That note proves that Lousteau has no C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(6005,37):to the archives of the age.--To-day Lousteau flatters me, to-morrow he C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(6010,13):superior to Lousteau's vulgar retaliation; but I would have died C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(6015,32):love, but a man!--He must be a Lousteau! C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(6022,46):by an appeal of honor? It is not for Etienne Lousteau that I plead, C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(6037,14):but he found Lousteau fuming with irritation. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(6053,1):Lousteau the expression of feeling he had so long been expecting. "I C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(6070,61):Piedefer, were so entirely adverse to literary labors, that Lousteau C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(6091,1):Lousteau could not possibly cease the entrancing deceptions of his C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(6095,50):to the household, in the kind of life into which Lousteau had allowed C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(6117,42):were a success. More than once she saved Lousteau's self-esteem by C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(6123,40):live comfortably till the end of 1838. Lousteau became used to seeing C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(6127,49):prize, and the more she gave the more she loved Lousteau; the time C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(6144,27):and health, Didine was to Lousteau what Mademoiselle Delachaux was to C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(6148,50):black, as Malaga said, making fun mercilessly of Lousteau. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(6157,43):life of a literary woman; she accompanied Lousteau to every first- C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(6173,1):Lousteau was allowed to entertain several of his friends--Nathan, C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(6179,44):Before long, her jealousy put weapons into Lousteau's hands. During C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(6186,16):gone to spy on Lousteau, who, believing her to be ill, had engaged C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(6268,46):cross the forecourt, but that was enough for Lousteau; it was plain to C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(6280,5):it, Lousteau regarded himself, morally speaking, as the creditor. It C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(6302,35):"It is very good advice," replied Lousteau drily, knowing the C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(6308,49):her cheeks, while she did not speak a word, and Lousteau only saw them C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(6321,1):Lousteau knelt down by her and kissed her hands with a lavish display C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(6360,1):Lousteau could produce in Dinah the acute agitation which may be C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(6373,1):Lousteau money on the ground of the enormous advances he had had C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(6383,23):read to the bottom of Lousteau's soul, sense was still too much for C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(6416,33):"I never thought of that," said Lousteau simply; and he added to C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(6424,1):Lousteau was so fatuous as to affect, among his friends, the attitude C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(6460,1):Lousteau's satiety, that odious conclusion of such illicit relations, C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(6466,1):Lousteau's character. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(6491,57):The part now assumed by Dinah was horribly painful, and Lousteau made C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(6519,29):heard the familiar sound of Lousteau's boots, and his well-known ring C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(6552,1):Lousteau's remark, "What! are you studying /Adolphe/?"--"If for one C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(6606,4):to Lousteau no more than a reserve in the background, had again C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(6617,49):She restricted herself to urging that Dinah and Lousteau should live C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(6720,35):Hotel de la Baudraye, she awaited Lousteau, dressed ready to leave the C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(6726,17):She carried off Lousteau, quite bewildered by the light and easy C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(6806,29):The two lovers were sullen. Lousteau affected dejection, he aimed at C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(6810,13):"Why," said Lousteau presently, "why not end as we ought to have begun C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(6838,1):Lousteau's influence, was interpreted by him as the death-warrant of C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(6845,43):tormenting a cockchafer he has killed it, Lousteau shed a tear. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(6949,4):to Lousteau's articles. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(6987,32):consuming joys. She would hate Lousteau for not taking any pains to C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(7015,5):not Lousteau a little of your husband's generosity of heart?" C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(7054,1):Lousteau dined and breakfasted and smoked as if he were a rich man. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(7068,36):asked for a franc. What distressed Lousteau was not the fact of owing C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(7076,18):legal authority. Lousteau was taking a walk, smoking cigars, and C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(7114,39):"Would Madame la Comtesse do Monsieur Lousteau the favor of receiving C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(7129,48):see the children put to bed. She then sent for Lousteau, and received C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(7143,1):Lousteau, who remained standing, or walked about the room, chewing the C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(7148,1):Lousteau, saw that he was dressed as the most fastidious dandy might C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(7159,39):There was another pause, during which Lousteau turned away, took out C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(7180,29):She must, she felt, dismiss Lousteau, who affected to be unable to C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(7184,57):"Thank you," she added, rising and offering her hand to Lousteau. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(7188,1):Lousteau took her hand and pressed it tenderly to his heart. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(7206,59):Their eyes met with the same fiery glow as had encouraged Lousteau on C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\msdpt10.txt(7361,1):Lousteau, Etienne C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\nccmd10.txt(685,13):of Monsieur Lousteau's," he continued, looking at Gazonal with the eye C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\nccmd10.txt(1184,57):"No; I have given all I had to--you know who. That poor Lousteau went C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\nccmd10.txt(2678,1):Lousteau, Etienne C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\ncngn10.txt(1706,13):"Well, yes. Lousteau's Matifat; ours, in fact. The Matifats, even then C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\prbhm10.txt(955,30):short, was one of us. Finot, Lousteau, du Tillet, Desroches, Bixiou, C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\prbhm10.txt(1463,32):"And the catastrophe?" queried Lousteau, returning just at the end of C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\prbhm10.txt(1557,1):Lousteau, Etienne C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\sfacl10.txt(378,32):evil actions. He started, like Lousteau or Vernou, to be a great C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\sfacl10.txt(561,10):mansion, Lousteau a carriage, Rastignac her footmen, des Lupeaulx a C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\sfacl10.txt(584,21):"He is right," said Lousteau, who had hitherto listened without C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\sfacl10.txt(604,14):interrupting Lousteau. "La Torpille is something far better than all C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\sfacl10.txt(637,38):and he turned to Blondet, Finot, and Lousteau. C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\sfacl10.txt(639,62):"Yes, the boy is cut out of the right stuff to get on," said Lousteau, C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\sfacl10.txt(9529,61):small evening parties, solely to get Lucien into the house. Lousteau, C:\Balzac\balzacbooksnofront\sfacl10.txt(22877,1):Lousteau, Etienne 736 occurrence(s) has been found. Output completed (9 sec consumed).
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