Chapter
1 1| dangers were plainly to be seen. In that fund the State,~
2 2| Lupeaulx was always to be seen in open-worked silk stockings,
3 2| the post from which~he has seen a succession of ministers
4 3| Porte-Saint-Martin,~Elisabeth had never seen a comedy. When she asked
5 4| lover in~chief.~ ~Dutocq had seen with great uneasiness what
6 4| his day! You ought to have seen how~they scratched paper
7 4| the office he was often seen in a melancholy attitude,
8 4| years. Bixiou, who had never seen any other hat on~Poiret'
9 5| Sebastien was at work, and had seen him copying some papers
10 5| memorandum which he had seen,~together with its copy,
11 5| the room? You might have seen the elephant, and the~hat
12 5| des Lupeaulx had certainly~seen the document which judged
13 6| monstrance that many persons have seen and admired at Monsieur~
14 6| equal! Ah, you should have seen him buying up old furniture;~
15 6| they breakfasted, "have you seen the articles on Baudoyer?"~ ~"
16 7| never allow~herself to be seen "doing" her own rooms, or
17 7| eye in a portion of flesh seen through an hiatus in the
18 7| on business, I shall~have seen him and spoken with him.
19 7| all her beauties had been seen and envied, she had been
20 8| nothing but blank paper to be seen.~ ~"This is going to be
21 8| that, Dutocq, as we have seen, had rushed to~des Lupeaulx
22 8| people to know you have just~seen me."~ ~While Dutocq was
23 8| declaims]:--~ ~"Thou who has seen the fall of grand, illustrious
24 8| physiognomist would have seen the diabolical expression
25 8| rings me up to ask if I have seen his handkerchief or his
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