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PREMIER CITOYEN. We are accounted poor citizens; The patricians good. Good signifie

He was ten paces from him, and made the saint's slippers tremble. 8. Everything was there in front of him. 9. Tartarin saw the big negroes running at him. 10. He had just slain the poor tame lion. De quoi Tartarin s'est-il acquis la certitude en se réveillant? 2. Dans quel état se voyait-il? 3. De quoi doutait-il? 4. Qu'est devenu le prince? 5. Dans quelle position Tartarin était-il assis? 6.

His love for Cécile, granddaughter of a gentle country doctor, is rapidly making a man of him, when his mother enters again into his life and the poor boy dies miserably in a hospital, killed by despair rather than by disease. This is perhaps the most powerful of Daudet's novels; it is certainly the most harrowing.

[Note 48: Poor perdu (enfant perdu); on sait que l'on donnait ce nom

Car tu es fou, Hamlet, et tu ne mens pas quand tu dis: His madness is poor Hamlet's ennemy.

Et pourtant... c'est lui qui prépare ton dernier voyage, poor Ophelia! c'est lui qui va dire

On n'a jamais pu s'accorder en Angleterre sur le sens de ces paroles de Lear: les uns ont voulu supposer qu'on avait aussi étranglé le fou, ce que rien n'indique dans la pièce, et ce que rien ne permet de supposer; d'autres ont cru que my poor fool, expression de tendresse quelquefois employée, s'adresse ici

Mon cœur et ma tête en sont remplis, enivrés. Vous avez garder de mon sens poétique et de mon intelligence une singulière opinion... Rendez-moi votre estimeAlas! poor Yorick!

So great a loss is not to be repaired or obliterated by time." And again: "Poor Mme. de La Fayette is now wholly at a loss what to do with herself. The death of M. de La Rochefoucauld has made so terrible a void in her life that she has come to judge better of the value of such a friendship. Every one else will be comforted in the course of time, but she, alas, has nothing to occupy her mind."

We know how deep and lasting was the grief of Mme. de La Fayette for the loss of the man with whose life her own had been so long and so closely united. On March 17th, 1680, Mme. de Sévigné writes: "M. de La Rochefoucauld died last night. When again will poor Mme. de La Fayette find such a friend, such kindness, such consideration for her and her son?