Chapter
1 I | in the Latin~Quarter; his people ate roast cockchafers and
2 II | minister if you cannot gauge people's~consciences. There, my
3 II | resumed payment; forthwith people grew accustomed to his paper
4 II | his soldiers are private people's~interests. He has stratagems
5 II | Beaudenord could hear his people called without a pang~of
6 II | He could go among city~people as he chose, and the Faubourg
7 III| Aiglemont had~more sense than people credited him with, which
8 III| epithet of 'the Great.' People used to say 'the Great Marcel,'
9 IV | by a garrulous quadrille. People certainly noticed~Isaure
10 IV | wife. Now, don't laugh, people~are looking at us.'~ ~" '
11 IV | care~so much about other people.' But while I was in civil
12 V | therefore do not trouble other people; they never beset~the lives
13 V | livres a~year which so many people envy. By this time Rastignac
14 V | very much richer than other people. In his own mind, he was~
15 V | constant quantity of~rich people to be taxed? Joint-stock
16 V | species."~ ~"It would lead people to conclude that the fool'
17 VI | take a doubtful turn and people lose confidence, the Government~
18 VI | means~of inoculating the people, the classes least restrained
19 VI | rejoice the hearts of~honest people, especially tradespeople.
20 VII| its height, when several people were greatly~astonished
21 VII| even more splendid than~people expected of them on the
22 VII| estimable and unfortunate people are living on a~third floor (
23 VII| of the law, and~enriched people in spite of himself. No
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