Chapter
1 1| sight of this essential point in our rapid analysis of
2 1| incomplete they might be, the point of view from which he~looked
3 1| seeks instruction on~this point can look at Venice, Madrid,
4 1| minute portion of it as a point of departure in case of
5 1| apparently yet so simple in point~of fact, which did away
6 3| official life. From this~point of view the apprenticeship
7 4| service politics from~their point of view with the servants
8 4| that he was ill, or on the point of being so, instead of
9 5| make to the Chamber on that point which the opposition raised
10 7| mysteries would ever after~point him out as a man capable
11 7| women when pressed on a~point they are not ready to talk
12 7| s wife is not."~ ~"That point need not be considered,"
13 7| return."~ ~She was on the point of revealing her husband'
14 7| Gobseck.~ ~"Let us come to the point, my son," said Gigonnet. "
15 8| there~if you concede the point about Baudoyer; and you
16 8| desert him."~ ~From this point des Lupeaulx went on with
17 8| We need not, we think, point out to the~intelligent reader
18 8| a pity you~directed the point of your pencil against a
19 8| is, from the bureaucratic point of~view, a neutral being.
20 8| buttons!"~ ~Bixiou. "But the point is, DO YOU UNDERSTAND ME?"~ ~
21 8| of account-books to the point~of going over all the additions
22 8| revolution~bore heaviest, in point of fact, upon the lackeys,
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