Chapter
1 I | recompense his poor old father, who was~slaving his life
2 I | 1819, summoned home by his father to take the~helm of business,
3 I | with David. All that the father made, the son, of course,
4 I | this worthy knew nothing of father or son. If,~in the first
5 I | sixteen hundred francs!' Why, father," cried David, letting~the
6 I | eggs with--sabots that your father~has plodded on with these
7 I | you what you are."~ ~The father, without coming to grief
8 I | David. "Ten thousand~francs, father! Why, that is two francs
9 I | coming to terms with his father. It~was a case of Yes or
10 I | money matters~with his own father, especially as he credited
11 I | especially as he credited that father with the~best intentions,
12 I | an exorbitant demand.~ ~"Father, you are cutting my throat!"
13 I | senior and his son. The good father was to let his~house and
14 I | soon as he paid off his father, he was to be made~sole
15 I | wages. When he asked his father, as a partner, to contribute~
16 I | by the sweat of his old father's brow? Now surely~was the
17 I | to be passive while~his father poured out a flood of reasons--
18 I | himself; saw, too, that his father was trying to make money
19 I | David understood his father thoroughly after that answer;
20 I | he had entered with his father.~ ~"I will work," he said
21 I | be.~ ~"Marion!" said his father.~ ~Marion, a big country
22 I | thinks that he has~acted a father's part; old Sechard was
23 I | any one employ a man whose father had been a Septembrist,
24 I | proposal sent by David to his father brought the old~vinegrower
25 I | were extinguished~by their father's death. The great Desplein,
26 I | the poor garret~above. A father's passion for natural science
27 I | Lucien told David of his own father's~farsighted views of the
28 I | bethought~himself of two of his father's ideas. M. Chardon had
29 II | never have advised. The old father~found his daughter a great
30 II | for a son-in-law to suit father and daughter equally well,
31 III | brothers nor sisters nor father nor mother;~the great tasks
32 III | times,~he told her of his father's genius and blighted hopes
33 III | man of the future, and a father,~friend, and brother to
34 III | inherited the physique of his father the~pressman and the flat
35 III | offence to him that his~father's name should be thus posted
36 III | would take a man like your father to find what I am looking~
37 III | was beginning to~think his father's apprentice prodigiously
38 III | bad looking neither! Your father did everything~well."~ ~
39 III | advance towards the son of a father~said to be rich. People
40 III | who knew nothing of his~father's wealth. In David's eyes
41 III | at~vintage time when his father walked him up and down among
42 V | up~with low people; his father was an apothecary, and his
43 V | printer's~foreman."~ ~"If his father sold biscuits for worms" (
44 V | He is continuing in his father's line of business, for
45 V | back of the yard (if my~father will allow it, that is.).
46 V | David.~ ~"But perhaps your father would object----"~ ~"Never
47 V | said David; "if asking my father is all that is~necessary,
48 V | dear. Yes, it pleased my father to ruin me; he made a~speculation
49 V | inventors, like my poor father, who must have a~woman to
50 V | right to know it, for your father was interested in the~matter,
51 VI | problem that occupied your~father), Cardon brought an action
52 VI | the improvement which your father endeavored to make is a
53 VI | Lucien told me that your father, with the intuition of a
54 VI | me of this~idea of your father's, this plan for using vegetable
55 VI | lovers.~ ~"If only your father makes no objection to the
56 VI | night the whole way to his~father's house. He went along by
57 VI | the hedge.~ ~"Good day, father," called David.~ ~"Why,
58 VI | been put on the land!"~ ~"Father, I have come on important
59 VI | yourself."~ ~"I shall some day, father, but I am not very well
60 VI | much manure," replied~his father. "The gentry, that is M.
61 VI | am going to be married, father, and I have come to ask
62 VI | to ask for your consent, father."~ ~"Oh! that is another
63 VI | Angouleme."~ ~"I am engaged, father."~ ~"David, you know nothing
64 VI | this."~ ~"It seems to me, father, that until now I have given
65 VI | suppose."~ ~"Very well, father, I will build the second
66 VI | the son will~improve his father's property. It is not the
67 VI | dog, to come round your~father."~ ~The question thus raised
68 VI | opportunity of posing as a good father without~disbursing a penny;
69 VI | could not reckon on his father's help in~misfortune.~ ~ ~ ~
70 VI | exception? Suppose~that my father were to marry his cook,
71 VI | the second floor in his father's house. His~father's house
72 VI | his father's house. His~father's house it was; but, after
73 VI | again some day, and his father was sixty-eight~years old.
74 VI | to Marsac to persuade his father to come to the~wedding,
75 VII | horseback to the Escarbas; my father must be your second; old
76 VII | the pitiless~Jacques. "My father often used to tell me of
77 VIII | keen, curious glance; the father was anxious to form his
78 VIII | Louise could leave her father and M.~de Bargeton together;
79 VIII | am going to Paris, and my father is taking Bargeton~back
80 VIII | upon~for a year from his father's successor.~ ~"Three francs
81 Addendum| Marquis Armand de~The Thirteen~Father Goriot~A Distinguished Provincial
82 Addendum| Baronne de (Eugene's parents)~Father Goriot~ ~Rastignac, Laure-Rose
83 Addendum| Laure-Rose and Agathe de~Father Goriot~The Member for Arcis~ ~
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