Chapter
1 1 | philosopher enough to take life as he found it; an~honest
2 1 | of the Restoration.~ ~The life of this man was marked by
3 1 | the young man to start in life~was never felt again in
4 1 | first five years~of married life. By the end of this time
5 1 | perfect comfort~and ease of life. When the worthy auctioneer
6 1 | expectations at the~opening of her life were more or less warranted,
7 1 | Those who know~Parisian life will readily understand
8 1 | tangle of the affairs of life was a Gordian knot~impossible
9 1 | kept the great things of life from her grasp,--blaming
10 1 | of the companion of her life. In the first place, she~
11 1 | doomed her to a disappointed life through his~fault; HIS;
12 1 | centre and derived their life from it. The result was
13 1 | loses time and health and life to no~avail. An undermining
14 1 | commerce increases, and life is ameliorated in the country
15 1 | disconsolate over her wasted life, weary of secretly working
16 2 | which still seems to have life in her. We ask ourselves
17 2 | following were the toils of his life. He was obliged to choose,~
18 2 | a scene represents both life and a~monastery.~ ~A few
19 2 | For the first time in his life, then," he replied, shrugging
20 3 | her way. If we~relate the life of her father and mother,
21 3 | Saillard at their start in life to bear constant privation.~
22 3 | thirty-three years of married life, and twenty-nine years of~
23 3 | home~where the customs of life were rigid and the ideas
24 3 | the commonest things of life; spent in a few directions
25 3 | allowed herself to think that life might have gone~better with
26 3 | whereas at~twenty-five life is so full that he has no
27 3 | this easy~gap emerged into life the rich supernumeraries
28 3 | enlightened by gleams by Parisian life~soon measures the frightful
29 3 | disease--of government official life. From this~point of view
30 4 | most distinguished of his life. He said~if he could leave
31 4 | business and occupation of~his life. Vimeux had such aptitude
32 4 | happiness, his sole pleasure in life, was dress. He ruined himself
33 4 | he swayed to and fro in~life like a swing, without thinking
34 4 | ex-Lothario, led as~idle a life as Colleville led a busy
35 4 | all the acts of his daily life; he always laid his things
36 4 | black trousers.~ ~No human life was ever lived so thoroughly
37 4 | the little events of his life, for~his seat was close
38 4 | to keep a journal of his life,~in which he noted down
39 4 | desk the~journal of his life, and recorded the fact in
40 4 | He played ecarte, was the life of~evening parties, tossed
41 4 | little, and hid his private life so carefully that no one
42 4 | some day to lay down his life for a cause, he~lived on
43 4 | their petty and belittling life resembles that of~seminaries.
44 4 | seminaries. As a man advances in life he~grows more selfish; egoism
45 5 | office where the chances of life and~death are calculated
46 5 | Knowing the~spirit of official life better than any one, he
47 5 | the last moments of the life~of the director to Minard,
48 5 | Billardiere departed this life. He took upon~himself to
49 5 | dear for anything in my~life. That stuff cost six francs
50 5 | will only, for once in~your life, use your wits logically." [
51 5 | days the worst state of life is the~state of belonging
52 5 | of old La Billardiere's life?"~ ~Du Bruel made a sign
53 5 | first struggles in political life~these men, less old than
54 5 | have passed the prime of life; he trimmed and~shuffled
55 6 | has~fitly crowned a noble life, consecrated in dark and
56 7 | VII~SCENES FROM DOMESTIC LIFE~Parisian households are
57 7 | the~mysteries of Parisian life were unknown would certainly
58 7 | learned~for the rest of his life not to set foot in these
59 7 | Paris who understand~making life pleasant as she does. To
60 7 | study revenge,--I spend my life among them."~ ~When all
61 7 | with the manners of high life, while des Lupeaulx defended
62 7 | of~petitions."~ ~In the life of every woman there comes
63 7 | recurs with happiness all her life. As Madame Rabourdin took
64 7 | triumphs and glories of her~life,--all her beauties had been
65 8 | for~the first time in his life Poiret's feelings were stirred
66 8 | s~household. Twice in my life I have been set aside as
67 8 | meant a total change of life~and the necessity of starting
68 Add| Scenes from a Courtesan's Life~Honorine~The Seamy Side
69 Add| Scenes from a Courtesan's Life~The Firm of Nucingen~The
70 Add| Establishment~A Start in Life~A Prince of Bohemia~The
71 Add| Scenes from a Courtesan's Life~Honorine~ ~Desroches (son)~
72 Add| Colonel Chabert~A Start in Life~A Woman of Thirty~The Commission
73 Add| Scenes from a Courtesan's Life~The Firm of Nucingen~A Man
74 Add| Scenes from a Courtesan's Life~ ~Ferraud, Comtesse~Colonel
75 Add| Scenes from a Courtesan's Life~A Start in Life~Gaudissart
76 Add| Courtesan's Life~A Start in Life~Gaudissart the Great~The
77 Add| Abbe~Honorine~A Start in Life~ ~Gobseck, Jean-Esther Van~
78 Add| Scenes from a Courtesan's Life~The Ball at Sceaux~The Lily
79 Add| Scenes from a Courtesan's Life~Ursule Mirouet~ ~Metivier~
80 Add| Scenes from a Courtesan's Life~A Bachelor's Establishment~
81 Add| Father Goriot~A Start in Life~Scenes from a Courtesan'
82 Add| Scenes from a Courtesan's Life~The Middle Classes~ ~Rabourdin,
83 Add| Scenes from a Courtesan's Life~ ~Saillard~The Middle Classes~ ~
84 Add| Pierre Grassou~A Start in Life~Albert Savarus~Modeste Mignon~
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