Part, Chapter
1 I,I | that. Didn't he tell Madame Roguin that he had never~been unfaithful
2 I,I | son-in-law, and he will succeed Roguin;~but do you suppose he will
3 I,I | nothing at all~towards buying Roguin's practice. Little Xandrot,
4 I,I | Xandrot can't be a~notary, for Roguin's practice is worth four
5 I,I | it~will. Here it is then: Roguin has proposed a speculation
6 I,I | Madeleine, which, according to Roguin's calculations, we shall
7 I,I | any~one of us wants money, Roguin will get it for him by hypothecating
8 I,I | worthy Ragon and myself.~Roguin will be, under the name
9 I,I | masters of the whole~property. Roguin will investigate as to which
10 I,I | francs which are now with Roguin; I shall borrow~forty thousand
11 I,I | cannot pay them in cash,~Roguin will give the money at five
12 I,I | our game of boston? Is it~Roguin, a notary, a man fifty-seven
13 I,I | or Jules Desmartes, or Roguin, Cochin, Guillaume, Lebas,~
14 I,I | as Charles Claparon, as~Roguin? The profit is as sure as
15 I,I | dear friend, why should Roguin speculate? He gets his~commissions,
16 I,I | how they mix up ideas!~If Roguin were not in this business,
17 I,I | going into a thing without Roguin; therefore it is~worth nothing.'
18 I,I | by law?"~ ~"Let me go on. Roguin is in it, and you tell me
19 I,II | original~point of departure. Roguin, notary of Ragon, who had
20 I,II | that he gave himself up to~Roguin without allowing himself
21 I,II | predecessors, the uncle Pillerault, Roguin the~notary, the Messrs.
22 I,II | playing at /bouillote/, Roguin the notary placed on the
23 I,II | the perfumer, laughing.~ ~Roguin replied that he had won
24 I,II | period. Thanks to Madame Roguin, whom he had known at the
25 I,II | house of Nucingen, to which Roguin had introduced him,~and
26 I,III| Alexandre Crottat, head-clerk~to Roguin, and the wealth of his father,
27 I,III| Bless me! there's Pere Roguin, on foot at this hour, at
28 I,III| become aware of her blunder. Roguin hoped to~conceal this misfortune
29 I,III| had~guessed the secret of Roguin's household.~ ~From the
30 I,III| once for a divorce. But Roguin,~happy in obtaining a rich
31 I,III| such an agreement. Madame Roguin thus~became sovereign mistress
32 I,III| treats an elderly lover. Roguin soon found his wife too~
33 I,III| from~Bruges by a client of Roguin, who soon after left Paris
34 I,III| her to the notary in 1815. Roguin~bought a house for her in
35 I,III| between Monsieur and Madame Roguin. He had come~there not so
36 I,III| promise that~she would love Roguin for thirty thousand francs
37 I,III| the wine flowed freely, Roguin~unbosomed himself to du
38 I,III| night. He promptly reassured Roguin, and made him fire his~pistols
39 I,III| speculate--boldly."~ ~He advised Roguin to take a large sum from
40 I,III| profits could be~used by Roguin for his pleasures. If luck
41 I,III| luck went against them, Roguin~was to get away and live
42 I,III| thrown to a drowning man, and Roguin did not perceive that~the
43 I,III| round his neck.~ ~Master of Roguin's secret, du Tillet made
44 I,III| mistress, and husband. Madame Roguin, when told of a~disaster
45 I,III| Tillet's relations to~Madame Roguin then became such that her
46 I,III| of Louis XVIII., Madame Roguin was worth two hundred thousand
47 I,III| his return he found Madame Roguin faithful to him. As to~the
48 I,III| was now~a banker) advised Roguin to lay up something against
49 I,III| profitable to none but Madame Roguin and du~Tillet, Roguin heard
50 I,III| Madame Roguin and du~Tillet, Roguin heard the fatal hour of
51 I,III| ruin the perfumer, had made Roguin understand that~he would
52 I,III| into bankruptcy so soon as Roguin had drawn from him his last
53 I,III| value with the funds of Roguin and the assets of~the failure.
54 I,III| take, the lion's share. Roguin, unable to sue du Tillet~
55 I,III| their tidal chances. When Roguin first confided his~troubles
56 I,III| du Tillet~had allotted to Roguin, he develops the talents
57 I,III| the perfumer did see him, Roguin held out~his hand before
58 I,III| the perfumer, and which Roguin had been quick to perceive.~
59 I,III| Madeleine? Hey! hey! papa Roguin," he~added, tapping the
60 I,III| portion."~ ~"Very good," said Roguin, leaving him.~ ~For a moment,
61 I,IV | Cesar wished to get from Roguin the private deed about the~
62 I,IV | Tillet at the window~of Roguin's study. Although the /liaison/
63 I,IV | looked again and~saw Madame Roguin, and the presence of du
64 I,IV | unnecessary delay, that Monsieur~Roguin had drawn them up.~ ~"I
65 I,IV | legal talents of Monsieur Roguin, an old name~well-known
66 I,V | put implicit confidence in Roguin. To his mind~the notary
67 I,V | but one chance against~us. Roguin might run off with the money."~ ~"
68 I,V | night. She fears--"~ ~"That Roguin will carry off our funds?"
69 I,V | Sunday with the Ragons,~Roguin, and Monsieur Claparon.
70 I,V | claret stains~upon the cheek, Roguin's species of deformity,
71 I,V | and then~fell, sadly.~ ~Roguin's head-clerk, Alexandre
72 I,V | Mademoiselle Cesarine will marry Roguin's head-~clerk," the poor
73 I,V | fears and fancies about Roguin to your uncle, and he~laughed,"
74 I,V | cried Constance.~"That poor Roguin may be the best man in the
75 I,VI | Charles Claparon, Crottat, and Roguin. The notary brought with
76 I,VI | Monsieur Claparon," said Roguin, "I left him~dressing himself."~ ~"
77 I,VI | dressing himself."~ ~"Monsieur Roguin," said Cesar, "I hope you
78 I,VI | with no pretension," said~Roguin.~ ~"I have put Raguet on
79 I,VI | religious friendship.~ ~Roguin was not without anxiety
80 I,VI | Claparon," resumed Roguin, "makes up by night-work
81 I,VI | business."~ ~In spite of Roguin's clever precautions, Monsieur
82 I,VI | drunk, your future is lost. Roguin~will keep an eye on you.
83 I,VI | full of business," said Roguin.~ ~"Business has given him
84 I,VI | to~Cesarine.~ ~Monsieur Roguin overheard her, and put a
85 I,VI | deeds before dinner," said Roguin; "we are all~alone."~ ~Madame
86 I,VI | signed, in favor of one of Roguin's clients, a mortgage bond
87 I,VI | Temple; he turned over to Roguin Pillerault's cheque on the
88 I,VI | property, with Monsieur Roguin, as I do for ours. The~sellers
89 I,VI | said Claparon, glancing at Roguin, as if to ask whether that
90 I,VI | that--"~ ~"Faith!" said Roguin, interrupting him, "I am
91 I,VI | All's well," whispered Roguin to Claparon.~ ~"I shall
92 I,VI | Kellers, or Nucingen?"~ ~Roguin, surprised at such tact,
93 I,VII| Madame Ragon, and Monsieur Roguin were~playing at boston,
94 I,VII| judge and Anselme arrived. Roguin, placed opposite to Madame~
95 I,VII| her."~ ~"Xandrot," said Roguin to his clerk, as they left
96 I,VII| it!~Monsieur and Madame Roguin."~ ~"Mamma, Madame Roguin
97 I,VII| Roguin."~ ~"Mamma, Madame Roguin will wear her diamond fillet
98 I,VII| people crush us," said Madame Roguin to her husband as they~went
99 I,VII| rival.~ ~"Bah!" whispered Roguin to his wife, "it won't last
100 I,VII| wondering eyes. Madame Roguin, Constance,~and Cesarine
101 I,VII| the promised successor to Roguin, was noticed by Madame~Birotteau,
102 I,VII| English galop. Du Tillet, Roguin, Cardot junior,~the Comte
103 I,I | put his~current cash into Roguin's hands two weeks earlier,
104 I,I | future notary, "one word! Has Roguin given~your four hundred
105 I,I | were to be--negotiated. Roguin was to give~him--my two
106 I,I | thousand~francs are still with Roguin. Roguin was so long connected
107 I,I | francs are still with Roguin. Roguin was so long connected with
108 I,I | thousand francs. I gave them to Roguin~just as I would give you
109 I,I | for you, or the borrower;~Roguin has squandered it, together
110 I,I | the young notary. "Madame Roguin is not to be~counted on.
111 I,I | has had a narrow escape. Roguin tormented him~for a month
112 I,I | an affair with Nucingen. Roguin has written an~atrocious
113 I,I | punished her; she has wasted Roguin's whole fortune~and much
114 I,I | moneys of a notary! Madame Roguin won't have~a penny, except
115 I,I | rigidity. He was not aware that Roguin had~carried off Cesar's
116 I,I | he or any one talk about Roguin's flight. Tell~Cesarine
117 I,I | are placed are very hard. Roguin has carried~off a hundred
118 I,I | of four hundred~thousand. Roguin has also carried off two
119 I,I | divers securities which Roguin gave me to negotiate I have
120 I,I | foreseen such villany as Roguin's?" said Lebas, as~much
121 I,I | if I~had, for I had given Roguin a hundred thousand myself
122 I,I | to make the payments."~ ~"Roguin was the bank to me," said
123 I,I | been gobbled up to satisfy Roguin's,~isn't it our own fault?
124 I,I | His course is quite clear. Roguin's assets will give~fifty
125 I,I | thousand on his note to~Roguin's client, which the lender
126 I,I | course he can't count on what Roguin has carried off~to meet
127 I,I | himself really the victim of Roguin. He had given~Claparon a
128 I,I | thousand francs to pay over to Roguin the day~before the latter'
129 I,I | the latter's flight, and Roguin had returned the money to
130 I,I | would listen to him that Roguin had cost him~a hundred thousand
131 I,I | these, I~have my share of Roguin's assets, say perhaps one
132 I,II | cafe David last night about Roguin's affair, and the assassination
133 I,II | lender no longer had in Roguin's hands the sum which Roguin~
134 I,II | Roguin's hands the sum which Roguin~pretended to borrow for
135 I,II | profits. He was ignorant of Roguin's flight, of the~disasters
136 I,III| and Carminative Balm, the Roguin affair,~and his lawsuit
137 I,III| I know,--that affair of Roguin," replied du Tillet. "Hey!
138 I,III| he~went off; but Madame Roguin will pay them back from
139 I,III| of others. You are not a Roguin; I know~you," said du Tillet,--"
140 I,III| love than finance. Madame Roguin~had doubtless contributed,
141 I,III| your /liaison/ with~Madame Roguin. The devil! taking the wife
142 I,III| the other.~ ~"Oh! Madame Roguin!" said du Tillet, jestingly, "
143 I,III| judge let~fall a word about Roguin's flight, remarking that
144 I,III| Madame Ragon, at~the word Roguin, touched her brother's foot,
145 I,III| he has ordered that all Roguin's papers be~submitted to
146 I,III| ascertain the exact~time when Roguin made away with the funds
147 I,III| lender to the borrower. Roguin would be sent to the galleys
148 I,III| lender ought to have~sued Roguin for the costs and the caution-money;
149 I,III| they saying? Has Monsieur Roguin absconded?"~said Anselme,
150 I,IV | the country with Madame Roguin. He took~a cabriolet, and
151 I,IV | his mind.~ ~"That infamous Roguin is still connected with
152 I,IV | known for twenty years?"~ ~"Roguin? A fool! his share is ours
153 I,IV | You~yourself have seen Roguin's respectability,--a man
154 I,V | say you had no property in~Roguin's hands; according to your
155 I,V | according to your enemies, Roguin is only a blind. A~friend
156 I,V | thousand francs deposited with Roguin had~been remitted to the
157 I,V | meet. Therefore it is not~Roguin's bankruptcy which as ruined
158 I,V | hundred~thousand francs with Roguin, but he wouldn't have failed.
159 I,V | Popinot," said Gigonnet.~ ~Roguin, in the parlance of such
160 I,V | was now the~"unfortunate Roguin." Cesar had become "that
161 I,V | him the situation in which Roguin's~flight had placed Cesar,
162 I,V | walked along she met Madame~Roguin in a brilliant equipage,
163 I,VI | liquidation of the "unfortunate" Roguin. Thus the total amount made~
164 I,VII| be the victim of another Roguin? But my conduct~has been
165 I,VII| extent the confidence of Roguin's~clients had been betrayed.
166 I,VII| Fontaine took the place of Roguin and his wife. Cesarine~and
167 Add | Episode Under the Terror~ ~Roguin~Eugenie Grandet~A Bachelor'
168 Add | Pierrette~The Vendetta~ ~Roguin, Madame~At the Sign of the
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