Chapter
1 1| poor and friendless, to the house of a~Monsieur Leprince,
2 1| the~liquidations of the house of Nucingen, and died of
3 1| on the second floor of a house in the rue~Duphot, in an
4 1| mornings as he walked from his house to the ministry, or at half-~
5 1| amused themselves~at her house; they said so at least,
6 2| must be kept out of~the house, and such a creature, even
7 2| six daily invitations, the house where he could be sure~of
8 2| After dining once at the house of this unimportant~official,
9 2| to become the owner of a house in Paris?" cried~the minister.~ ~
10 3| regularly before he came to~the house, and to wash his hands with
11 3| entrusted to Falleix, the house in the place Royale, bought
12 3| time of which we~write, the house, which was worth a hundred
13 3| kind had been done to~the house. The Saillards kept the
14 3| did all the work of the house. The mother cooked well,
15 3| the third~floor of an old house. His business was that of
16 3| they kept a corner in the house in the rue Censier which
17 3| universal clearing up of the house,~which added an element
18 3| brought to the Saillard's house by old Bidault, who~lent
19 3| never attack it in this house."~ ~"You speak like the '
20 3| sorry to see the man in his house, but he was never willing
21 3| Madame Rabourdin, whose house appeared to him as~gorgeous
22 3| Yes, I welcomed you to my house with~the greatest pleasure;
23 3| was the last to leave the house.~ ~"At last!" thought Madame
24 4| good~reasons, in the same house as Florine, an actress for
25 4| on the second floor of a house in the rue de Ponthieu,~
26 4| her flowers, and kept the house. There was something very
27 4| know a single person in the house where he lived, and~always
28 5| to an autograph-printing house,~where he obtained two pressed
29 6| won't~invite Fleury to her house. He backbites her in revenge."~ ~
30 6| with the~coadjutor at the house of the curate of Saint-Roch."~ ~
31 6| You have adorned the house of God," said the Abbe Gaudron.~ ~"
32 7| brought des Lupeaulx to the house that morning.~ ~"Madame,
33 7| should never have~left this house. Good God! to think that
34 7| served to~bring you into this house, and that is all you wanted
35 8| fail at Monsieur Dutocq's house by seven~o'clock.~ ~"I'm
36 8| cochineal; he's a partner in the house of Matifat, rue~des Lombards.
37 8| Gigonnet-Bidault, who had dined at the house, had a~restless, fidgety
38 8| master and mistress of the~house. When Schinner and Monsieur
39 8| When Rabourdin left the house at eight o'clock, the porter
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