Shall
in sentence
4098 examples of Shall in a sentence
I
shall
not describe Julien's transports at La Malmaison.
I require that, thrice weekly, you pursue your theological studies in a Seminary, where I
shall
introduce you.
'I
shall
not conceal from you that the young Comte de La Mole is bound to look down upon you at first, because of your humble birth.
If you were a fool, you might let yourself be taken in by them; if you wished to succeed, you ought to let yourself be taken in.''On the day when all this ceases to agree with me,' said Julien,
'shall
I be considered ungrateful if I return to my little cell, number 103?''No doubt,' replied the abbe, 'all the sycophants of the house will slander you, but then I
shall
appear.
I
shall
say that it was from me that the decision came.'Julien was dismayed by the bitter and almost malicious tone which he remarked in M. Pirard; this tone completely spoiled his last utterance.
'Sir,' said Julien, 'it seems to me that I
shall
not remain long in Paris.''As you please; but observe that there is no hope of success, for a man of our cloth, except through the great nobles.
'If we continue to find pleasure in each other's company, and the Marquis's household does not agree with you, I offer you a place as my vicar, and
shall
divide the revenues of this living with you equally.
To his great confusion, Julien felt the tears start to his eyes; he was longing to fling himself into the arms of his friend: he could not resist saying to him, with the most manly air that he was capable of affecting:'I have been hated by my father from the cradle; it was one of my great misfortunes; but I
shall
no longer complain of fortune.
They see a Robespierre and his tumbril behind every hedge; often they make one die with laughing, and they advertise their house like this so that the mob
shall
know it in the event of a rising, and sack it.'
Ruin yourself at once, if you are to be ruined, and I
shall
be rid of the weakness I show in caring for you.
Arsene will remind you; today I
shall
make your apologies.'
'I think,' he said to Julien, 'that presently you might go to the riding school; and after a few weeks I
shall
be delighted to ride with you.''I wished to have the honour of thanking you for all your kindness to me; pray believe, Sir,' Julien added with a most serious air, 'that I am fully conscious of all that I owe you.
I
shall
bring him to see you.''Bah!
If he had not yet acquired any fineness of perception, he made up for the deficiency, as we
shall
see, by the vigour of his language.
'Ah, little wretch, I
shall
make you eat those words.
'I
shall
be glad to be your second,' said Lieven, 'but upon one condition: if you do not hit your man, you
shall
fight with me, there and then.''Agreed,' said Julien, with delight; and they went to find M. C. de Beauvoisis at the address indicated upon his cards, in the heart of the Faubourg Saint-Germain.
'His behaviour this morning was noble,' thought the Marquis, 'and I
shall
ennoble him.'
We
shall
not describe the feeling of horror, almost of hatred, with which he set foot on English soil.
When my lawsuits bore you, or when you no longer suit me I
shall
ask for a good living for you, like that of our friend the abbe Pirard, and _nothing more_,' the Marquis added, in the driest of tones.
'Not only,' M. de La Mole replied, with a serious air, 'will you introduce the new Baron to me tomorrow, but I
shall
invite him to dine the day after.
'I
shall
understand what perfection means to these people.'
'What a colourless life I
shall
lead with a creature like Croisenois,' she said to herself, as he led her back to her place an hour later ...'What pleasure can there be for me,' she went on sadly, 'if after an absence of six months, I do not find any in a ball which is the envy of all the women in Paris?
If they surrender me to my King I
shall
be hanged within twenty-four hours.
'You and I, at that dinner, will be the only two whose hands are free from blood, but I
shall
be despised and almost hated, as a bloody and Jacobinical monster, and you will simply be despised as a plebeian who has thrust his way into good society.'
I am like a man who, on rising from table, exclaims: "Tomorrow I
shall
not dine; that will not prevent me from feeling strong and brisk as I do today."
'If I ask anyone the reason of this mourning, I
shall
only make myself appear a fool as usual.'
'I must read over all the letters I have written today; Heaven knows how many missing words and blunders I
shall
find.'
I am burning to know; I
shall
be discreet, I swear to you!'This last sentence astonished her as she uttered it.
I
shall
go and read Brantome, d'Aubigne, l'Etoile.
I
shall
be able to challenge some of the anecdotes which Mademoiselle de La Mole cites to me.
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