Chapter
1 I | lighting a fire in his room, making his supper ready.~
2 I | consisted of a single huge room lighted on the side next~
3 I | attics in the roof. The first room~did duty as dining-room
4 I | furnished the homely old-world room; it was just as~he had left
5 I | cushions were ranged~round the room. The two clumsy arched windows
6 I | the dens at the end of the room he saw his son and the foreman~
7 I | finer nature he had not room for the dogged greed of~
8 III | there was no one else in the room.~ ~Mme. de Bargeton's words
9 III | Nais, found Lucien in the room,~they met him with the overwhelming
10 III | way of hand-rail. Lucien's room was an~attic just under
11 IV | clothes out in mother's room."~ ~The mother's room bore
12 IV | s room."~ ~The mother's room bore witness to self-respecting
13 IV | table in the middle of the room~stood a red tray with a
14 IV | closet, where there was just room for a narrow bed, an old-fashioned~
15 IV | was scarce~a soul in the room besides Mme. de Bargeton
16 V | his~wife, went round the room much as the beadle makes
17 V | the eagle's wings~have no room to spread themselves. I
18 VI | he saw a light in Eve's room.~ ~"What can be happening
19 VI | that he would cross the room on tiptoe the next~day,
20 VII | to Amelie~before a whole room full of people, and greeted
21 VII | Nais. Go into your~wife's room, and behave, both of you,
22 VII | The three went back to the room. Everybody scanned their
23 VII | to ear. One-half of the room was of the opinion that~
24 VII | stopped in the drawing-~room, and declared, with one
25 VIII| was a deep silence in the room.~The Chardons thought how
26 VIII| her into the narrow little room~where she had slept for
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