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see a simple shopman earning three times as
Sent to Paris by his father, who kept a draper's shop in his native town, he had absolutely refused to return home when the old fellow, thinking that he ought to know enough to succeed him in his business, had summoned him to do so; and from that moment a rivalry had sprung up between father and son, the former, absorbed in his little country business and shocked to see a simple shopman earning three times as much as he did himself, and the latter joking at the old man's humdrum routine, chinking his money, and throwing the whole house into confusion at every flying visit he paid.
— from The Ladies' Paradise by Émile Zola

spring and so straightened enough to turn and
At once I used my whole body as a spring, and so straightened enough to turn and put my arm power against his own, which was all I wanted.
— from The Way of a Man by Emerson Hough


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