Chapter
1 II | Coeur~kept the crown for France; he was allowed to do it,
2 II | to do it, and woman-like,~France was ungrateful."~ ~"Gentlemen,"
3 II | accustomed to his paper all~over France. Then an unheard-of-thing
4 II | mentioned; his very tailor, like France herself, might at last~show
5 II | there are asses here in France that want to import~the
6 III| the towns and communes of France, the~gendarmes and the rest
7 V | of Dantzig and Marshal of~France. Now, see what a match du
8 V | deposit with the Bank of France; they guaranteed nothing.~
9 V | us more victories here in~France than the vexatious chances
10 V | conceit out of him nicely.~France might have been too prosperous,
11 VI | the greatest~citizens that France has ever known ruined himself
12 VI | own conclusions; she knows France,~she knows that there is
13 VI | have greatly improved in France,' as if, forsooth,~they
14 VI | foreign capital lost to France," continued~Couture, "nor
15 VI | himself to~millions but makes France prosperous and great is
16 VII| the prettiest duchesses in France praying to him~to allot
17 VII| Revolution made a peer of France of Nucingen and a~Grand
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