Chapter
1 I | the inventory and~let us go downstairs. You will soon
2 I | honest old presses~that go like mail coaches, and are
3 I | English press that could go at that pace?" the parent~
4 I | typefounder is~the one you go to most seldom."~ ~" '----
5 I | how far the old man would go. He called old Sechard's
6 I | printing-house, it might go~some ways towards paying
7 I | join David at dinner and go back to Marsac, chewing
8 I | told her that I will~never go thither again unless another
9 I | an answer waiting~when I go home. All the aristocrats
10 I | evening, but I shall not go if the answer is~negative,
11 II | should fall in and they could go to~Paris. Meanwhile they
12 III | Mme. de Bargeton would go to concerts and "at homes"
13 III | deep thought; he would even go so far as to draw a table
14 III | himself, if he continued to go to the house, it was because
15 III | the Place du Murier and go down through the Palet Gate
16 IV | a victory. David should go to Mme. de~Bargeton's house!
17 IV | study~law or diplomacy, or go into civil service. Nobody
18 IV | stand in each other's way; go forward, you can tow me
19 IV | comrade felt all his heart go out towards his friend.~ ~
20 IV | his hat as if he meant to go, she~looked at him and smiled.~ ~"
21 IV | as David made as if to go at~once.~ ~David went out;
22 IV | obedience to his~wife. "Go and call on Monsieur So-and-So
23 IV | shall ask permission to go over to Severac, so~that
24 V | Amelie to M. du~Chatelet, "go and manage it somehow."~ ~"
25 V | me. When you~refused to go to Mme. de Bargeton's, you
26 V | position! If he means to go to Mme. de~Bargeton's, he
27 V | Some day, perhaps, he will go to Paris, the only place
28 VI | said David. "But I will go over to Marsac to-morrow
29 VI | begin with,~you must not go out nursing any more, and
30 VI | David, however, did not go back into Angouleme; he
31 VI | said David.~ ~"You just go into the market and see
32 VII | innocence. A man does not go down on~his knees to ask
33 VII | would have proved nothing to go back again then.~ ~"Now,
34 VII | Bargeton was~preparing to go to bed, and had opened his
35 VII | caused by his folly, he~would go, I am convinced, to insult
36 VII | de Rubempre~defends her. Go at once to Stanislas and
37 VII | say for him.~ ~"Very well; go into Amelie's bedroom,"
38 VII | been saying about Nais. Go into your~wife's room, and
39 VIII| to explain that all would go off well. In a duel between
40 VIII| it ended, lest you should~go to Mme. de Bargeton's or
41 VIII| Lucien, "she asks me to go to her to-day; and I~ought
42 VIII| me.--Would you~rather not go?" she added, surprised that
43 VIII| words, "Would you rather not go?" tears came into his eyes,~
44 VIII| your quarrel. There, sir, go; I am~mistaken in you."~ ~
45 VIII| a fortnight, if~only you go with her now? Surely, she
46 VIII| quite made up your mind to go."~ ~Lucien's head sank dejectedly;
47 VIII| you not, that~he ought to go to Paris at once?"~ ~David
48 VIII| two thousand~francs."~ ~"Go in to see Postel," said
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