Chapter
1 1| Commonplace suitors held back in fear.~Xavier Rabourdin,
2 1| the Bourbons, etc. Forced back to his~intrenchments, the
3 1| that which he wins he puts back again. All~remuneration
4 1| machinery they are given back. In fact the~budget is not
5 2| that is to say, he lay back~in a comfortable chair and
6 2| courted him, and gave him back with usury the flatteries
7 3| his smelting-~pot on his back, had found immediate employment
8 3| nature. When the cashier~got back from the office, he laid
9 3| cried his wife when he came back~into the room.~ ~Saillard,
10 3| departed, Saillard rolled back the~card-table and sat down
11 3| two officials, who sent back and forth to~each other
12 4| retirement only to bring him back on his~return; otherwise
13 4| that man. He is on~your back before you know it. Yesterday,
14 4| carriage and brought her back,--an attention which~evidently
15 4| francs without asking them back. He owned a country-house~
16 4| replied, "You~will take me back because my clothes do credit
17 4| her materials on his~way back; then, while waiting for
18 4| usually went to sleep with his back against the~wainscot, holding
19 5| Bixiou [standing with his back to the stove and holding
20 5| enough to get the~salary put back to three thousand."~ ~Colleville. "
21 5| not your affair, sir; go back to your own~office, and
22 5| could take a stab in the back and not let his face tell
23 5| quenched it. But, accustomed to~back and fill, retreat and return
24 5| Lupeaulx and Celestine came back to his memory like a flash
25 6| vaudeville.~--But to go back to what we were saying.
26 6| take me there and bring me back."~ ~At this instant Mitral
27 6| cried Mitral, "you've got back your bowels of compassion,~
28 6| and then mortgage them back to us for the amount of
29 6| settled we will hand~him back to you. Falleix is now canvassing
30 6| know." [He drags Bixiou back into his~cabinet, and says
31 7| but the harpoon is in his~back and he'll tow me where I
32 7| eye.~ ~"And he is coming back to dinner," she said. "Why
33 7| the windows. It will come back to him through the~cellars;
34 7| trust his wife!"~ ~She went back into the room.~ ~"If you
35 7| The man flung himself back on his happiness. To the
36 7| in advance,--had brought back with him the deeds of the~
37 7| men,~who took their way back (always on foot) to the
38 7| said.~ ~"Well, then, go back to the salon and coquette
39 8| that I might fling myself back on the~'Doctrine'?--which,
40 8| elsewhere. You will thus get back an important office to~give
41 8| Poiret, to put down his back; have you a~key?"~ ~Poiret. "
42 8| dear, dear! it is down his back." [Poiret goes hastily~out.]~ ~
43 8| world of trouble to get back my key.~That boy is crying
44 8| mysterious air, stood with his back~to the fireplace and looked
45 8| asleep with his head on the back of his armchair. He was
46 8| ministry, but I shall come~back with my neck free of the
47 8| When Rabourdin came back to the courtyard, after
|