ARSENE LUPIN VERSUS HERLOCK SHOLMES1910 |
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Common terms and phrases
accomplice Adieu Alice Demun Antoinette Brehat arrest Arsene Lupin asked Avenue Avenue Henri Martin Baron d'Hautrec Bleichen blonde lady blue diamond boat Bresson chimney Clotilde Destange Countess de Crozon Credit Foncier cried dear Master Detinan door drew Dudouis Echo of France Elysee Palace Englishman escape eyes face Felix Davey floor Folenfant Gani Ganimard Gare du Nord Gerbois hands Hello Herlock Sholmes jewels Jewish lamp laugh letter light looked Madame de Real Madame Real Mademoiselle mard Maxime Bermond minutes Monsieur Lupin Monsieur Sholmes morning never night o'clock old comrade opened paper Paris Pergolese police real blonde redingote replied returned ring robbery Rue Chalgrin Rue Murillo seemed seized Sholmes took silence stairs Suzanne taxicab tell thing thought ticket tion turned voice walked watched Wilson window woman words
Popular passages
Page 208 - The snow still fell and the wind still blew. The mother went without ceasing from the window to the door, and from the door to the window. The hours passed and Katinka did not return. "I must go and look for my daughter,
Page 80 - ... in good standing will please meet at number 105^ Sacramento Street, this day, Thursday, fifteenth instant, at nine o'clock AM By order of the COMMITTEE OF THIRTEEN." People stood still in the streets, when this notice met the eye. If this was actually the old Committee of 1851, it meant business. There was but one way to find out and that was to go and see. Number 105}^ Sacramento Street was a three-story barn-like structure that had been built by a short-lived political party called the "KnowNothings.
Page 197 - The fisherman put his line under his arm, and, taking a note book from his pocket, wrote something on one of the pages, tore it out, and handed it to the Englishman.
Page 197 - ... he-man." But assume that with your notion of the "real he-man" you've managed to terrorize quite a number of males beset with worries about their virility — especially among the intellectuals who've always been so afraid of being impotent. To have it or not to have it — that is the question. The greatest scholars and finest artists become neurotics if the few inches sticking out in front of them betray them. By an egotistical extension of himself, man knows anguish, neurosis, and even insanity;...


