Part, Chapter
1 I,I | we must give~the ball, my good friend. But what have you
2 I,I | arms in~those days for the good cause? Then, according to
3 I,I | risk being whatever the good God wills that I shall be,~--
4 I,I | days. We have one hundred good thousand~francs invested
5 I,I | in your native place, my good little~cat, with our furniture,
6 I,I | with us every Sunday? Is it~good old Ragon, our predecessor,
7 I,I | and spends his life in~good deeds. Does he want fine
8 I,I | clerk; and I see nothing good in that friendship. If he
9 I,I | Well, I don't look for any good in a man who has no honor
10 I,I | said without offence."~ ~"Good God! how queer women are
11 I,I | which will~keep the hair in good health will sell like bread;
12 I,I | Academy of Sciences. My good~Monsieur Vauquelin will
13 I,I | always punished for our good deeds?--here below, I mean.
14 I,I | have done a service to a good many people."~ ~"What did
15 I,I | would give~you a piece of good advice, Birotteau; and that
16 I,I | business? Come, let us do good for good's sake. Besides,~
17 I,I | Come, let us do good for good's sake. Besides,~perhaps
18 I,II | Paris so bewildered the good priest that~he was afraid
19 I,II | three coarse~shirts of good linen, and his travelling
20 I,II | than~ambition, more plain good sense than ability. Ragon
21 I,II | little to~do to win the good graces of Ursula; in such
22 I,II | Pillerault, "you have won a good~husband. He has a warm heart
23 I,II | is true as~gold, and as good as an infant Jesus,--in
24 I,II | to be an~honest woman, a good mother of a family, and
25 I,II | means of undertaking some good enterprise, my lad," he
26 I,II | perpetrated this folly in good faith and not as a trick,
27 I,II | in contests where~his own good sense would have suggested
28 I,II | each other in dress and good dinners; each had~said her
29 I,II | Birotteau alone had the good sense to treat hers with
30 I,II | their fortune, and whose good name she~shared. It is true
31 I,II | and drowned~herself. The good priest took the child, gave
32 I,II | to fortune he considered good. This young Norman, gifted
33 I,II | lay hold of all that was good to~keep. In short, he applied
34 I,II | almost military in requiring good as well as evil~actions
35 I,II | means,~thinking all equally good, he was too thoroughly convinced
36 I,II | slender young man, with a good figure and adaptive manners,~
37 I,II | convey the idea of a mutual good understanding. Without~giving
38 I,II | accounts, a labor which the good man knew to~be useless.
39 I,II | Saint-Roch in the best of good company. La~Billardiere
40 I,II | and conceit mingled with good nature,~which gave it originality
41 I,II | out of his mouth, and the good man had to~yield his ground
42 I,II | without~examination. Blind but good, not spiritual but deeply
43 I,III| are the~beauty of youth; good and affectionate, a little
44 I,III| all her perfumery. I get a good deal of custom through them;~
45 I,III| were not grateful out of good feeling, I ought to be so~
46 I,III| that my head-piece isn't~as good as another's; but the thing
47 I,III| tenaciously/! I've kept to good conduct; I never loved any
48 I,III| where they could turn to~good account a portion of the
49 I,III| the~necessary evil of all good government, and whose love
50 I,III| daughter's portion."~ ~"Very good," said Roguin, leaving him.~ ~
51 I,III| we can, so as to make a good reduction at wholesale."~ ~"
52 I,III| reduction at wholesale."~ ~"Good, my lad! That's the right
53 I,III| about dinner-time, to the good and illustrious~Monsieur
54 I,IV | but you are aware that a good~merchant ought to make money
55 I,IV | neighborhood, was a man to keep on good terms with. Grindot~accordingly
56 I,IV | contractors, but to get at good~effects cheaply."~ ~"With
57 I,IV | papa do as he likes. The good God has always~taken care
58 I,IV | happiness is virtue and good sense?~ ~In her moral qualities
59 I,IV | Jean-Baptiste Molineux seemed~good and obliging. He played
60 I,IV | of the Left. He read the "Good Sense" of the~Cure Meslier,
61 I,IV | more in order."~ ~"Very good," said Birotteau.~ ~"And
62 I,IV | insult. In the main she was a good woman, with a high-colored~
63 I,V | heavy losses had driven the good man into a kind~of Christian
64 I,V | his income he spent it~on good deeds, and in presents to
65 I,V | the Abbe Loraux; for the good people of that circle knew
66 I,V | give it up? The thing is good; though it may be a long~
67 I,V | registration is~decided."~ ~"Good! My boy, you must be getting
68 I,V | to me you are risking a good deal outside of~your business.
69 I,V | wrings my heart; and such good, noble souls, the very~flower
70 I,V | greatest~torments of mankind, a good cosmetic becomes a benefaction."~ ~
71 I,V | a little~silica, and a good deal of sulphur. The differing
72 I,V | Olive oil is quite as good as nut oil," said Vauquelin,
73 I,V | to Birotteau. "All oil is good to preserve the bulb from~
74 I,V | that whale-oil is just as good. No power, chemical, or
75 I,V | Comagene Essence~we need a good foundation--"~ ~"'Comagene'
76 I,V | him to say that any oil is good; if the public~knew that,
77 I,V | Cesar, with mock humility, "Good God, how~shall we pay them?
78 I,VI | rare chance, and one of good omen, with which he resolved
79 I,VI | Bah! you will find him a good fellow, with no pretension,"
80 I,VI | choice of the little street a good one. The house, which~stands
81 I,VI | prospectus."~ ~"Ha, very good!" cried Gaudissart, "that
82 I,VI | light him up.~ ~"I wish you good evening, gentlemen," said
83 I,VII| one which did Birotteau good service in~after days. When
84 I,VII| Duchesse de Lenoncourt--"~ ~"Good heavens, Cesar!" said Constance, "
85 I,VII| killed, like us, for the~good cause.' Why, we are all
86 I,VII| in conspiracy."~ ~"Very good, put them down," said Constance. "
87 I,VII| whispered. "La! la! a very good night to you,~Madame Cesar--
88 I,VII| taking possession of the good things and the pretty things~
89 I,VII| was~extremely gay, full of good humor, and enlivened by
90 I,VII| of every one, and yet is~good, obliging, devoted, feeling,
91 I,VII| There is a perfume of good taste about this appartement
92 I,VII| ll~fry her in oil."~ ~The good understanding between Mademoiselle
93 I,VII| I asked it of him. I am good to my tenants."~ ~"If Pere
94 I,I | Cayron always seemed to do a good business," said Lourdois,
95 I,I | said Lourdois;~"there is a good deal said about them: there
96 I,I | proclaimed him "one of those good fellows~it is a pleasure
97 I,I | he prepared to go out.~ ~"Good morning, monsieur," said
98 I,I | ridiculing the architect with the good~nature of a merchant sure
99 I,I | thought I was getting a good~thing!--and paid a hundred
100 I,I | weight~troubles me, it is good for nothing."~ ~"Poor Pere
101 I,I | was your clerk; he has a good head; he will help you."~ ~"
102 I,I | said Birotteau.~ ~"Very good," said Claparon. "But you
103 I,I | about it. But he will take good care not to send them for
104 I,II | finger~upon the sore."~ ~"Good God! you are ruined!" cried
105 I,II | no interest in it--bit of~good fellowship, you know!" "
106 I,II | to a party~accused, with good reason, of seeking the overthrow
107 I,II | coarse varnish of popular good humor, a tone of insolence,
108 I,III| they think you have~got a good thing, and close it the
109 I,III| some day she could bestow a~good round sum on her master
110 I,IV | Birotteau, "monsieur is a good~royalist, and der intimate
111 I,IV | vay--" said~this great and good and venerable financier,
112 I,IV | you could be~brettier!"~ ~"Good God! the Ragons sold their
113 I,IV | What do you want, /my good Cesar/?" said du Tillet.~ ~
114 I,IV | heard the crackling of a good fire, though the owner was~
115 I,IV | peaceful governments. I'm a good fellow when I've~got my
116 I,IV | You mean Gigonnet, that good little Gigonnet, easy-going--"~ ~"
117 I,IV | Pr-r-r! We don't play low, my good fellow," he said, tapping
118 I,IV | soften his refusal.~ ~"Very good," said Birotteau. "So much
119 I,IV | you, so~I'm not afraid, my good sir. Nowadays, business
120 I,IV | man of genius has found a good~thing, the moneyed man taps
121 I,IV | into the fiery furnace, my good fellow,~and you haven't
122 I,IV | manage the affair.' Very good! The~banker then convokes
123 I,IV | banknotes. There it all is, my~good sir. Come, go into the business
124 I,IV | glass of champagne! it is good, I~tell you! It was sent
125 I,IV | once sold quantities at a good price--I used to be in wines.
126 I,IV | yawning before him.~ ~"Very good, monsieur, very good; I
127 I,IV | Very good, monsieur, very good; I thought I knew everything
128 I,IV | men seeking to save their good name,~will play the part
129 I,IV | catastrophe? If~it is that, what good will it do to drag me down
130 I,V | die with his general."~ ~"Good heart and bad merchant,
131 I,V | maxims, though I know how good and pious you are, because
132 I,V | speculation is no doubt a good one; Gigonnet, or some one
133 I,V | master. At four o'clock~the good priest came; Constance explained
134 I,V | confessor.~ ~"You have a good brother," said Monsieur
135 I,V | a tender daughter, two good friends,--your uncle and
136 I,V | Hold yourself ready to make good those~notes of Birotteau;
137 I,V | of poor sheep such as me! Good God! it would~burn my shoulders,
138 I,V | markets."~ ~"Come, you are a good man," said the market-woman. "
139 I,V | own son."~ ~"Sorry has one good," said Cesarine, kissing
140 I,VI | cent which he has~been so good as to offer us. Here is
141 I,VI | ex-successor turned pale; but the good old man opened his~arms,
142 I,VI | the cloth he wore was too good for him.~ ~"At least," he
143 I,VII| little air of~confidence. "Be good and sweet; talk to us, put
144 I,VII| laughed, but which these good bourgeois~thought quite
145 I,VII| Madou.~ ~"Ah, there you are, good soul!" she cried. "I didn'
146 I,VII| you people;~you've got good places. As for me, I work
147 I,VII| there's honor for you! good measure and running over!"
148 I,VII| admiration. "Look here, my good monsieur, I am doing a fine~
149 I,VII| royal dignity to have his good deeds divulged," said the
150 I,VII| his nephew to~receive the good news; and when Birotteau
151 I,VII| bestowed upon him seemed of~good augury, and the astonishment
152 I,VII| bread with the fumes of a~good dinner under his nose. Popinot
153 I,VII| No," said Cesar.~ ~"Very good; then let us go at once
154 I,VII| du Tillet.~ ~"Oh! all in good part," said Lebas, smiling
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