Chapter
1 I | problematical, since they were not known to possess either stock
2 I | Even in 1827 I have known him without a penny," said
3 II | Blondet.~ ~"I have only known him in his own house," said
4 II | Nucingen's name was scarcely known. At that time bankers would
5 II | inferiority.~How was he to get known? He suspended payment. Good!
6 II | with a name hitherto only known in Strasbourg and the Quartier~
7 II | La Fontaine's sayings are known in Philistia!" put in Bixiou.~ ~"
8 II | tigers from England. He was known by~his tigeras Couture is
9 II | by~his tigeras Couture is known by his waistcoatsand found
10 III| arithmetic. You to whom Paris~is known down to its very excrescences,
11 IV | let us parody his best known saying with, 'How much there
12 IV | us the finest~orgy ever known not long before he died?"~ ~"
13 IV | that most~adhesive of all known varieties of bird-lime.~
14 V | gist of the matter has been known in Paris since~1750, and
15 V | about piano, piano, making known~the merits of the concern
16 VI | citizens that France has ever known ruined himself to keep six~
17 VI | upright folk in Paristhe best known men in business, that isand~
18 VII| In 1829 it was too well known that Claparon was a man
19 Add| Ball at Sceaux~ ~Bidault (known as Gigonnet)~The Government
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