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Updated: June 23, 2025


The personage, determined to be gracious at any cost, insisted. "Then it must have been at Chateaubriand's that I have seen Monsieur! I know Chateaubriand very well. He is very affable. He sometimes says to me: 'Thenard, my friend . . . won't you drink a glass of wine with me?" Marius' brow grew more and more severe: "I have never had the honor of being received by M. de Chateaubriand.

"Yes; he is a very rich man. His wife is a patient of mine. When I was visiting her yesterday the Captain put the thing before me in fact, gave me carte blanche to choose for him. He requires the services of a medical man an Englishman if possible " "But I'm an American," said Adams. "It is the same thing," replied Thénard, with a little laugh.

According to Stahl, the ferment is somebody who knocks the table, and shakes the card-house down; according to Fabroni, the ferment takes out some cards, but puts others in their places; according to Thénard, the ferment simply takes a card out of the bottom story, the result of which is that all the others fall.

Mademoiselle THENARD begins to double her in this line of acting, but in a manner neither more sprightly nor more captivating. Parts of Soubrettes or Chambermaids. Mesdemoiselles DEVIENNE and DESBROSSES.

Marius gazed intently at him: "I know your extraordinary secret, just as I knew Jean Valjean's name, just as I know your name." "My name?" "Yes." "That is not difficult, Monsieur le Baron. I had the honor to write to you and to tell it to you. Thenard." " Dier." "Hey?" "Thenardier." "Who's that?"

About half-way down the avenue we heard a few cries of "Vive la Russie," and then came a burst of cheers. Our dinner was rather pleasant that evening. We had the Préfet, M. Sebline; Senator of the Aisne, Jusserand, present Ambassador to Washington; Mme. Thénard, of the Comédie Française, and several young people.

Another view was therefore taken by the French chemist, Thenard, and it is still held by a very eminent chemist, M. Pasteur, and their view is this, that the yeast, so to speak, eats a little of the sugar, turns a little of it to its own purposes, and by so doing gives such a shape to the sugar that the rest of it breaks up into carbonic acid and alcohol.

"I will give you five minutes, as a matter of form. Thénard, in a note to me this morning, informs me he has given you all details as to salary." "Yes, he gave me the details. As you give me so short a time to make my decision about you, I suppose you have already made your decision about me?" "Absolutely," said Berselius. "Two minutes have passed. Why waste the other three?

"He is just recovering from the anæsthetic." The girl was silent for a moment, then she asked where Thénard was. "He has left. He has to operate again to-night on a case which has just called for him by telephone. He asked me to tell you that everything possible has been done. He will call in the morning, and he has left everything till then in my hands." "I shall not go to bed," said Maxine.

Very few of them remain, and the old traditions handed down from father to son for three or four generations are disappearing. After dinner we had music and some charming recitations by Mme. Thénard.

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