Part, Chapter
1 I,I | isn't it pitiable? His business is doing well, for he gave
2 I,I | them; let us extend~our business, and at the same time press
3 I,I | invested outside of our business, our productions, our~merchandise.
4 I,I | marry our daughter; sell the~business, and let us go and live
5 I,I | and the proceeds of the business will allow us~to buy Les
6 I,I | property outside of the~business to establish our daughter,
7 I,I | will then be twenty, our~business will be sold, and we shall
8 I,I | You don't understand business, my beloved little cat.
9 I,I | has forty upright years in~business to boast of, and with whom
10 I,I | the farm. Let us sell the business, marry Cesarine, and give
11 I,I | Roguin were not in this business, you would say to me: 'Look
12 I,I | it, and you tell me the business is~worthless. Is that reasonable?
13 I,I | put himself openly in the business if it were~necessary. Can'
14 I,I | when he first~went into business? Come, let us do good for
15 I,II | of employing~him in the business.~ ~When the terrible levy
16 I,II | are always destructive of business. Moreover, like~a true perfumer,
17 I,II | recover the value of their~business, it was necessary to find
18 I,II | into~the gravest matters of business, and into the invisible
19 I,II | excessive ambition, bought the business of "The Queen of Roses"
20 I,II | his wife for his~start in business, would have scorned to exchange
21 I,II | details of perfumery,--a business which she~understood admirably.
22 I,II | francs over and above his business. The~regularity of his affairs,
23 I,II | and knowledge outside the business of~perfumery. Mixing wholly
24 I,II | was refused a share in the business,~and who was reckoned a
25 I,II | and~think only of their business. The worthy man was shocked
26 I,II | the shop on a~pretext of business.~ ~"Du Tillet," said the
27 I,II | merchants, who were present on business with Birotteau, also observed~
28 I,II | sphere~of those who mingle business with pleasure, and make
29 I,II | of which, as they knew, business affairs stood much in~need.~ ~
30 I,II | beyond the lines of his business, his craftiness~left him
31 I,III| him about setting up in business. He thought suddenly of
32 I,III| while attending to the business of the house, he threw a~
33 I,III| upon me, in the midst of a business~conversation! Here, sit
34 I,III| I think of retiring from~business. It is you, my boy, who
35 I,IV | Languedoc, doing a poor business,~whom Cesar had several
36 I,IV | met with swindlers in his~business career, would have been
37 I,IV | put his money~into a bad business and then endeavor to get
38 I,IV | needed the stewing of some business in~which his interests were
39 I,IV | little customs,~I do my own business (an excusable hobby), and
40 I,IV | who was used to~the quick business methods of merchants.~ ~"
41 I,IV | much do~you want? I know business well enough to be certain
42 I,IV | yourself, that will be my business;~but you will at once pay
43 I,IV | am prompt and square in business. We will agree that you
44 I,IV | would not be~possible to do business if we made so many stipulations."~ ~"
45 I,IV | stipulations."~ ~"Oh, in business, that is very different,
46 I,IV | proprietor of~her present business (an affair which had long
47 I,IV | competitors, and had made his business a monopoly. In spite~of
48 I,V | property was all in his business at the~time when Cesar put
49 I,V | The greater part of his business was conducted by word of~
50 I,V | a~bargain. In his latter business days he might be seen smoking
51 I,V | at which he retired~from business, his fortune consisted,
52 I,V | francs, the value of his business, which~he had sold to one
53 I,V | Engaged for thirty years in a~business which amounted to a hundred
54 I,V | life when, on quitting~his business, he sought the rest which
55 I,V | Though he had sold his business, he did not wish~to leave
56 I,V | thousand francs, from my business. As for the Ragons,~they
57 I,V | good deal outside of~your business. Won't the business suffer?
58 I,V | your business. Won't the business suffer? However, that is
59 I,V | Well, go on; settle the business; lands can't fly away. We
60 I,V | Why, we ourselves stop all~business on the twenty-first of January."~ ~"
61 I,V | what a day! I am set up in business,~and Monsieur Cesar is decorated."~ ~"
62 I,VI | as long as a man is in business he should be careful of
63 I,VI | is unassailable. But your business habits are so strong~that
64 I,VI | have some experience in business. You know, of course, why
65 I,VI | manner.~ ~"Shall we do the business before dinner?" asked uncle
66 I,VI | mean to settle a~piece of business."~ ~In spite of Roguin's
67 I,VI | was enough to turn grave~business matters into a farce; so
68 I,VI | to take gloomy views of business;~it is heavy, dull, risky,
69 I,VI | mind.~ ~"He is so full of business," said Roguin.~ ~"Business
70 I,VI | business," said Roguin.~ ~"Business has given him little education,"
71 I,VI | You do a great deal of business?" said Pillerault, seating
72 I,VI | understand how it is that business is risky; we have got to
73 I,VI | the stains of his dirty business upon the walls, in~the court,
74 I,I | hypocritical~voice, "we settled our business so hastily that you forgot
75 I,I | always seemed to do a good business," said Lourdois, who just~
76 I,I | until he has~retired from business," said little Molineux,
77 I,I | should still carry on his business, signing~always 'So-and-so,
78 I,I | banished from~the kingdom."~ ~"Business would be more secure," said
79 I,I | the whole value of their business, or~who sell their merchandise
80 I,I | as these do more harm in~business than a real misfortune,--
81 I,I | put on when they speak of business, and wish to pretend~they
82 I,I | about; I know enough of business to~feel sure it would injure
83 I,I | Monsieur Claparon?"~ ~"The business was settled in your presence.
84 I,I | whom I do a great deal of business,--Pere~Bidault. That is
85 I,I | that I should attend to my~business properly."~ ~"Monsieur Claparon
86 I,I | his friend's legitimate business of perfumery.~ ~"I came
87 I,II | would~soon need four. In business, opportunity is everything.
88 I,II | he find time to think of business?" thought Birotteau, much~
89 I,II | brief. I come on~commercial business only,--to ask if I can obtain
90 I,II | which I examine into~certain business matters. We shall be proud
91 I,II | complying; he looked at~business from a lofty standpoint;
92 I,II | responsible partner, the careful business man.~Two words, two speeches,
93 I,III| consideration in which you are held.~Business is not conducted on sentiment.
94 I,III| had to take account~of the business of every one who wanted
95 I,III| wise-heads of the banking business, du Tillet. Dear fellow,
96 I,III| perfumery; he wishes to~have business relations with your house.
97 I,III| To those with whom he~did business this intentional error was
98 I,III| gulled like children by business men,~bankers, and lawyers,
99 I,III| ledgers; he had put the business on Celestin's~shoulders
100 I,III| francs! So you~are doing business with du Tillet,--a monster,
101 I,III| Popinot~to go on with his business, for he perceived that the
102 I,IV | Madame la baronne, I came on business, and I am--"~ ~"Yes, matame,
103 I,IV | you bermit us to speak of business?"~ ~Delphine made a little
104 I,IV | million francs' worth of business by this~time."~ ~Five minutes
105 I,IV | a credit is an ordinary business matter; it happens every~
106 I,IV | Birotteau, "I came solely on business, and I shall~not detain
107 I,IV | even the inspiration of business; to catch its~vim one must
108 I,IV | nothing. Bah! I'm sick of business; I don't want to~talk about
109 I,IV | don't want to~talk about business; I've got money enough,
110 I,IV | Bah! let us get rid of business,~canals, loans, and peaceful
111 I,IV | at you. I'm only~in the business for a commission on the
112 I,IV | my good sir. Nowadays, business is all parcelled out~in
113 I,IV | good sir. Come, go into the business with us. What would you
114 I,IV | all in one--never injures business;~quite the contrary. Men
115 I,IV | some go~in you. Let's do business together. You have got a
116 I,IV | I shall send after you; business before everything."~ ~Birotteau
117 I,IV | what,~against the rules of business, such as endorsing notes
118 I,IV | the chances of your new business, which may~prove his only
119 I,V | sleeping-partner on~the profits of the business, and we are certain to make
120 I,V | with illusions! We must do~business with francs, not feelings.
121 I,V | believes that you set him up in business expressly as a last resource.~
122 I,V | is going the~rounds among business men to-day. You might hawk
123 I,V | me? There are crises in business when we must stand up~three
124 I,V | to~do?"~ ~"To carry on my business."~ ~"That would not be my
125 I,V | creditors, and~keep out of business. I have often imagined how
126 I,V | to foresee everything in~business! a merchant who does not
127 I,V | never have continued in business. What! be forced~to blush
128 I,V | Many men take up their business~as if nothing had happened:
129 I,V | your property, sell your business, and~find something else
130 I,V | who go out of their~proper business," said Claparon, hastily
131 I,V | good-humor, "how goes the~business?"~ ~"So-so," said Madame
132 I,V | Reprobate! is that what he~calls business? There is no honor among
133 I,VI | authorized to liquidate the business,~negotiate all transactions,
134 I,VI | had~the happiness to be in business the whole drama of bankruptcy,
135 I,VI | this functionary, whose business it is to~pass judgment on
136 I,VI | not laying the bankrupt's business in ashes, on the other~by
137 I,VI | sacrifice his time, his own business, and pay an attorney to
138 I,VI | which time Don Quixote's own business is suffering, and~he is
139 I,VI | securities, he continues his business, he is not~deprived of the
140 I,VI | the whole property and the business~of their debtor, seizing
141 I,VI | repossess himself of his business, and the~failure of the
142 I,VI | forty-eight thousand francs. The business of~"The Queen of Roses"
143 I,VI | books were regular,~and his business as clear as the day. All
144 I,VI | were here. I have been in~business for twenty years, and this
145 I,VI | Cesarine threw~herself into her business with the devotion of a young
146 I,VI | to~Pillerault the whole business of investing their savings.
147 I,VI | savings. Returning~thus to business, the latter made the most
148 I,VII| along by the whirlwind of business, had~never revisited Sceaux,
149 I,VII| transacted~the smallest business with him; du Tillet's very
150 I,VII| helped Celestin to buy your~business; but I did it on one condition,--
151 I,VII| Monsieur Cesar's share in this~business for a hundred thousand francs,
152 I,VII| me?" he said; "why, what business are you doing?"~ ~Feeling
153 I,VII| I shall never go back to business, monsieur. No~human power
154 I,VII| boldly into the vortex of business.~Far from so doing, Birotteau,
155 Add | Firm of Nucingen~A Man of Business~The Middle Classes~ ~Cochin,
156 Add | Secrets of a Princess~A Man of Business~Cousin Betty~The Muse of
157 Add | Ursule Mirouet~A Man of Business~The Member for Arcis~The
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