Chapter
1 1 | matrimonial claims of a dowry~of two hundred thousand francs.
2 1 | was lost or destroyed. Two~years before her father'
3 1 | consisting of father, mother, two children, a~chambermaid
4 1 | in an apartment costing two thousand francs a year.
5 1 | maintenance must cost at least two thousand francs~besides)
6 1 | defending themselves before the two Chambers and the court,
7 1 | as to the clerks, had the two~parties dared to feel each
8 1 | forward under one crown, two~statesmen alone bear the
9 1 | Each required the work of two hundred~officials, and no
10 1 | to each person of one or two francs for the consumption
11 1 | of taxes; it thus loses two forms of production. As
12 2 | the royal~household. His two official posts which appeared
13 2 | court, his sinecure, his two offices and their~advantages;
14 2 | Then he worked an hour or two; that is to say, he lay
15 2 | standing erect and rigid on his two legs,~held well together
16 2 | clerks? will he dismiss two to make room for three?"
17 2 | at the top of an egg, and two little legs at the other
18 3 | with her mother, and the two~did all the work of the
19 3 | a~tippler and lighted by two gleaming vulture eyes, allowed
20 3 | considered the more able of the two; his position as head of
21 3 | the~hidden oracle of the two functionaries, her husband
22 3 | sapient arguments of the two officials, who sent back
23 3 | it really~is. There are two kinds of supernumeraries,
24 3 | object to draw together two men who can never injure,~
25 4 | doctor Bianchon, flanked by two old female relatives, surrounded~
26 4 | wide landing separated its two bureaus, the doors of which
27 4 | antechambers of the heads of the two~bureaus, Monsieur Rabourdin
28 4 | antechamber, salon, and two offices of Monsieur de la
29 4 | first floor, divided in two by an entresol, were the
30 4 | to wit:~a footman for the two bureaus, another for the
31 4 | another for the service of the two~chiefs, and a third for
32 4 | ministry. He had brought his two nephews, Laurent and Gabriel,~
33 4 | disgraceful marriage. The two~understood each other well.
34 4 | preferred the scenes written by~two."~ ~"Why don't you write
35 4 | disconcerted; "they~never come two days together at the same
36 4 | at the same hour."~ ~The two nephews looked at each other
37 4 | he has!"~ ~"Though I make two sous by all his breakfasts,"
38 4 | though he has been here two years. It's a shame! it
39 4 | half-scholarship for each of his two~sons in the College Henri
40 4 | A standing joke in the two bureaus was the question
41 4 | saying, he would scarify his two neighbors before a~dinner
42 4 | that they could live on~two thousand, they married without
43 4 | Minard's means.~ ~In the two bureaus were two clerks
44 4 | In the two bureaus were two clerks so devoted to each
45 4 | Rabourdin, speaking~of the two men, "whether our friendships
46 4 | Unlike these Siamese twins, two other clerks, Chazelle and
47 4 | measure them quarterly. The~two clerks, by dint of quarrelling
48 4 | notorious by misconduct, and the two brothers had the~grief of
49 4 | junior for the~space of two weeks; and he never knew
50 4 | impertinence and conceit. The two chiefs were~polite to him,
51 4 | his coat of arms (sable, two swords in saltire, on a
52 5 | house,~where he obtained two pressed copies of the memorandum,
53 5 | won't be~angry, will you? Two such geniuses as you and
54 5 | in Godard's~room, and the two are conversing in a low
55 5 | worthy man is dying. The two ministers are both~with
56 5 | steps simultaneously." [The two functionaries go out~together.]~ ~
57 5 | outside a minute." [The two go into~the corridor and
58 5 | first~returned; then to two thousand five hundred before
59 5 | government clerk~lives between two negations. The world has
60 5 | notary, a rag-picker lays by two or three thousand francs
61 5 | and~wishing to please the two ministers, he wanted an
62 5 | du Bruel.~"There are not two women like her in Paris.
63 5 | between Pitt and Napoleon, two men who conducted the politics
64 5 | my wife."~ ~Such were the two thoughts to which his mind
65 6 | Billardiere requested it of the two~ministers on his death-bed,
66 6 | owing to a certain note for two hundred francs, of~doubtful
67 6 | will secure the future of two men who are ready to do~
68 6 | newspaper to-night."~ ~When the two reached home and entered
69 6 | not," said Saillard to the two ecclesiastics, "do us the~
70 6 | keep a carriage waiting at two francs~an hour. Madame Baudoyer
71 6 | through the window-panes the two faces of~Gobseck and Gigonnet (
72 6 | wood-work of the old cafe, like two cameo heads,~cold and impassible,
73 6 | their gravity gave~them. The two Parisian misers were surrounded
74 6 | understand what I want in two words. You must at once,~
75 6 | once,~between you, send two hundred and fifty thousand
76 6 | miserable hovel, with the two hundred~and fifty thousand
77 6 | vacancy, don't~you?"~ ~The two misers nodded.~ ~"Des Lupeaulx
78 6 | dear; I dare not let those~two cormorants out of my sight."
79 6 | dictate in this way through two opposing newspapers in one~
80 6 | Lupeaulx, handing him over the two journals, and~continuing
81 6 | registration, and~that will give us two places. You can be head
82 7 | Read that."~ ~He gave the two newspapers to the graceful
83 7 | blurred~her sight, as if two lightning flashes had blinded
84 7 | on the~contrary, to reach two hundred millions. Then,
85 7 | I have Celestine and my two~children." The man flung
86 7 | around him. "There are not two women in Paris who understand~
87 7 | carefully cut dress, the two~sides of which met at the
88 7 | minister intends to unite the two divisions and place them
89 7 | passed into the hands of the two usurers, who~hastened (though
90 7 | masters?" he said.~ ~The two extortioners continued cold
91 7 | deeds and~read them."~ ~The two usurers took a mental inventory
92 7 | power of attorney. Within two days Baudoyer is~to be nominated;
93 7 | Once in the street, the two usurers looked at each other
94 7 | served as a laugh to the two old men,~who took their
95 7 | came to an~understanding two years ago [the coxcomb!],
96 7 | about YOU."~ ~"We will be two old friends," said des Lupeaulx, "
97 7 | the Cafe Themis, saw the two~usurers returning, but was
98 8 | they are going to unite the two divisions under~one director--
99 8 | news of the union~of the two divisions, that of La Billardiere
100 8 | Billardiere had already~departed. Two new supernumeraries had
101 8 | reads]:--~ ~"Ans.--There are two kinds of good,--eternal
102 8 | by a recent purchase of two hundred thousand francs'
103 8 | So now, let us agree on two~things; first, the postponement
104 8 | thing for a sign~over the Two Baboons. And what a coat!
105 8 | gleams of gold, that the two scoffers were sobered~at
106 8 | you examine those uncles?--two copies of Shylock.~I'll
107 8 | salon was deserted; only two or three~guests remained
108 8 | Dutocq simply chose between two powers the one he~thought
109 8 | France! And there are but two ways to meet~such calumny,--
110 8 | toil~certainly deserves two or three hours attention
111 8 | I! I!" she said, on two sublime tones. "Am I a base
112 8 | and Sebastien, the only two who, under his~great disaster,
113 8 | possibly get along without two~Chambers, without the liberty
114 8 | assembled in the salon,--two or~three ministerial deputies,
115 8 | commissary, after a delay of two years, some account in which
116 8 | which there~was an error of two farthings. This is how and
117 8 | She handles, therefore, two thousand four hundred millions,
118 8 | work is sixty millions,--~two and a half per cent; and
119 8 | purpure, three~mascles argent, two and one; third, paly of
120 8 | overhear a dialogue between the two~nephews of old Antoine,
121 Add| Prince of Bohemia~Letters of Two Brides~The Muse of the Department~
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