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liege-vassal 1
lies 5
lieutenant 1
life 135
life-long 1
lifetime 2
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139 those
138 been
136 us
135 life
134 such
133 time
132 three
Honoré de Balzac
Rise and Fall of Cesar Birotteau

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life

    Part, Chapter
1 I,I | To put him into public life! On the word of an honest~ 2 I,I | do what their position in life demands. Government has 3 I,I | be~put forward in public life as my arm is to turn a windmill. 4 I,I | animals, and I can pass my life very well taking care of 5 I,I | can then~change our way of life. Why do you want to crush 6 I,I | property, and spends his life in~good deeds. Does he want 7 I,I | Madame on hers. Is that the life of a notary? If they~make 8 I,II | rapidly thrown over the past life of this household will~strengthen 9 I,II | Revolution, and led the wandering life of priests not sworn~by 10 I,II | cities,--made Cesar think the life~of Paris very hard. At night 11 I,II | certain mysteries of Parisian life, which she made~him look 12 I,II | in other times ordinary~life would have placed between 13 I,II | cardinal events in Cesar's life. The nightly conversations 14 I,II | alone, he thought, give life to money, and he grew bigoted 15 I,II | Birotteau~saved the clerk's life. A few friends carried the 16 I,II | and where he would lead a life of happy obscurity. He was 17 I,II | give to pleasure. In such a~life wants become imperious, 18 I,II | difficult to love him. The life of~Paris and his sojourn 19 I,II | a family, and looked at life according~to the religious 20 I,II | equilibrium of the juices of life, which tends to~relieve 21 I,II | steadily plodding on through life, saw the dawn of an era 22 I,II | stopped there; his laborious life had kept~him from acquiring 23 I,II | upon all the acts of his life a light which~made them 24 I,II | three years of their married~life, she was a prey to continual 25 I,II | Paris, led a filibustering life whose chances might bring 26 I,II | army, commerce, or domestic~life. Obliged to live like a 27 I,II | his opinions on men and life in a way to shock a scrupulous 28 I,II | showed the simplicity of his life. The heavy~eyebrows were 29 I,II | course of his commercial life had seen such loss of time 30 I,II | of judging politics and life~in their entirety, and of 31 I,II | light and~strength of his life; for his desire to rise 32 I,II | for his desire to rise in life, and the limited~knowledge 33 I,II | long remembered.~ ~Every life has its climax,--a period 34 I,II | results. This mid-day of life, when living forces~find 35 I,II | nations and of individual life? /When the effect~produced 36 I,III| influence upon the mechanism of life, has been perhaps too much~ 37 I,III| might galvanize back to life when it suited him. In~such 38 I,III| a libertine and vagabond~life, led him to say /amen/ to 39 I,III| in Paris to make plans; life is too fast, too full, too~ 40 I,III| said Birotteau. "Such is life.~Apropos, when do we marry 41 I,III| one of the sorrows of my life. I~cannot make him accept 42 I,IV | distinguished in his own sphere of life, and the possessor of a 43 I,IV | advantages which the open-~air life of Rome gives to the Transteverine 44 I,IV | the thoroughly bourgeois life. Sooner or later she would 45 I,IV | walls of its~houses, has no life or movement except in the 46 I,V | noble doctrine, which gave life to his~existence, and colored 47 I,V | the habits of commercial life~lowered the stern and monumental 48 I,V | him for hard work and long~life; his broad shoulders showed 49 I,V | showed the purity~of his life. Integrity, a sense of duty, 50 I,V | had led the hard and sober life of a determined~worker. 51 I,V | the pleasures of an idle life when, on quitting~his business, 52 I,V | kept up his former ways of life, and~enlivened his old age 53 I,V | quite consistent in his life and ideas; there was nothing 54 I,V | fine old man lived a family life; he went about~among the 55 I,V | interior, the pure and simple life of Pillerault was revealed 56 I,V | men best able to estimate life), a~crucifix with a basin 57 I,V | habits are the secret of long life and sound health. Politics~ 58 I,V | How do they contrive to life?"~ ~"Never mind how; they 59 I,V | and cobblers lead a holy life here below," said~Birotteau.~ ~" 60 I,V | is impossible to give it~life, and I am lost! my prospectus 61 I,V | Birotteau, "you restore me to life! I have thought of~selling 62 I,V | among the finest in his life. He knew you, he~venerated 63 I,V | busy and half cloistral life the smallest events have~ 64 I,V | most important days in our life! The nuts are bought, the~ 65 I,V | would sacrifice his own life that his wife's might be 66 I,VI | who~believed he owed his life to the judge, cherished 67 I,VI | deep-cut lines a licentious life,~whose misdeeds were still 68 I,VI | habits of this devil-may-care life should crop~up to the surface 69 I,VI | to be hoaxed; he saved my life. Ha! when one gets to~the 70 I,VII| children," he said, "my part in life is not to share in gaieties,~ 71 I,VII| superior world of social life; girls without mind, among 72 I,VII| he gave a~sketch of his life, related his habits and 73 I,I | all had been simple in his life; he manufactured and sold, 74 I,I | to~fill some part in his life. His weird face had grinned 75 I,I | throughout his whole commercial life. Like all persons who have 76 I,I | when a man is starting in life he must be~careful of his 77 I,I | tell him it is a matter of life or death, that on~no consideration 78 I,I | falsehood, to save honor or life, to those who are about 79 I,I | the chances and changes of life? Cesar resolved to confide~ 80 I,I | involved the whole of his life, past, present, and to come,~-- 81 I,II | Birotteau, envying his uncle's life.~ ~"Well!" said Pillerault, 82 I,II | his heart was the whole of life to the poor man. After going 83 I,II | for the first time in his life~this necessary coldness, 84 I,II | and cruelly gashed in his life, his honor, his wife, his 85 I,II | and~feelings of his whole life, looking for the lights 86 I,II | a regular certificate of life for dead hair,~offered to 87 I,III| thought; "I have the power of~life or death over him,--over 88 I,III| courageous! All~that I desire in life is to be loved as he loves 89 I,III| nineteen years of married life was not~yet fully known 90 I,IV | the Bank. My~credit is my life; that is the case with all 91 I,IV | I see you accepting your life~courageously, I shall have 92 I,IV | have strength to begin my life over again. I~know your 93 I,IV | the habits of a slovenly life had~spoiled, dirtied, greased, 94 I,IV | received a summons in my life," said~Birotteau.~ ~"There 95 I,IV | Birotteau went out, weary of life. It is in the nature of 96 I,IV | ardor.~ ~"Ah! you save my life," exclaimed the poor man, 97 I,IV | through the history of human life. Cesarine, sitting on a 98 I,V | your troubles, that this life is a scene of trial, and 99 I,V | flung into the storms of life~upon the perilous waves 100 I,V | bitterness. Look~not on life, but lift your eyes to heaven; 101 I,V | few superfluities in my life, I can return the~four hundred 102 I,V | Popinot will get~along between life and death, and as for you, 103 I,V | said that if I took up my life~bravely, you would have 104 I,V | for the last time~in his life, as he looked at these three 105 I,VI | live without taking part in life, like the child that he~ 106 I,VI | made the reward of a pure life, this~judge is a trader, 107 I,VI | cruellest scenes of Cesar's life was his forced conference~ 108 I,VI | restore his victim to a~life of perpetual gratitude. 109 I,VI | through the simplicity of his life,~--was able to understand 110 I,VI | sustained Cesar in this life of trial. And in~this way 111 I,VII| twenty years of married life~the love of a wife for her 112 I,VII| regaining his honor agitated his~life inordinately; he completely 113 I,VII| know it well, angel of my life, and--"~ ~"What power have 114 I,VII| was incompatible with the life and~sentiments of such a 115 I,VII| have destroyed the man for life, no doubt placed in the 116 I,VII| him the gates of~social life. His uncle took him by the 117 I,VII| superabundance of its own life upon the~aged. Like Cesar 118 I,VII| which gave both death and life to all posterity; for~it 119 Add | Scenes from a Courtesan's Life~Honorine~The Seamy Side 120 Add | Scenes from a Courtesan's Life~ ~Camusot~A Distinguished 121 Add | Scenes from a Courtesan's Life~Cousin Pons~ ~Cardot, Jean-Jerome-Severin~ 122 Add | Jean-Jerome-Severin~A Start in Life~Lost Illusions~A Distinguished 123 Add | Scenes from a Courtesan's Life~ ~Crottat, Alexandre~Colonel 124 Add | Colonel Chabert~A Start in Life~A Woman of Thirty~Cousin 125 Add | Scenes from a Courtesan's Life~The Government Clerks~A 126 Add | Government Clerks~A Start in Life~Gaudissart the Great~The 127 Add | Scenes from a Courtesan's Life~Cousin Pons~Honorine~Gaudissart 128 Add | Scenes from a Courtesan's Life~The Member for Arcis~ ~Granville, 129 Add | Scenes from a Courtesan's Life~A Daughter of Eve~Cousin 130 Add | Provincial at Paris~A Start in Life~Scenes from a Courtesan' 131 Add | Scenes from a Courtesan's Life~Beatrix~The Middle Classes~ 132 Add | Loraux, Abbe~A Start in Life~A Bachelor's Establishment~ 133 Add | Scenes from a Courtesan's Life~Another Study of Woman~The 134 Add | Scenes from a Courtesan's Life~Modeste Mignon~The Firm 135 Add | of Two Brides~A Start in Life~The Marriage Settlement~


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