Part, Chapter
1 I,I | who represent the city of Paris should make it their~duty,
2 I,I | crosses to the~municipality of Paris; the prefect, selecting
3 I,I | is married to a notary of Paris, and live eight months of~
4 I,I | the~wife of a notary of Paris, as you say. Well, then,
5 I,I | retire solid bourgeois of Paris, with fifteen thousand~francs
6 I,I | been in office? A notary of Paris! he would be the flower
7 I,I | succeeds I may become deputy of Paris. Ah! I am not named~Cesar
8 I,I | and pass the winters in Paris with our son-~in-law; we
9 I,I | among the bourgeoisie of Paris, as was done in~former times.
10 I,I | all the gray-heads in Paris will fling~themselves upon
11 I,II | brother Cesar. The bustle of Paris so bewildered the good priest
12 I,II | native place and~came to Paris on foot to seek his fortune,
13 I,II | blistered by the pavements of Paris, and his bruised shoulders,~
14 I,II | Cesar think the life~of Paris very hard. At night he cried
15 I,II | place who was then hiding in~Paris,--a lad twenty years old,
16 I,II | called the "humbugs" of Paris. So when Ursula abandoned
17 I,II | the~correspondence between Paris and the West secretly went
18 I,II | through~fear of the dangers of Paris as from application to his
19 I,II | since been~established in Paris with more or less of painted
20 I,II | vogue, and that in a part of Paris~which was the least favorable
21 I,II | stones in the streets of Paris.~ ~The head-clerk of "The
22 I,II | for the smaller trades of Paris are more or less strangers
23 I,II | to love him. The life of~Paris and his sojourn in a dark
24 I,II | fashion and~elegance of Paris. In point of fact, this
25 I,II | Roses, Rue Saint-Honore, Paris, near the Place Vendome.~ ~"
26 I,II | the leading merchants of~Paris. To improve his knowledge,
27 I,II | When he first came to Paris, Cesar had known how to
28 I,II | opinions of the bourgeois of Paris, who admires Moliere,~Voltaire,
29 I,II | Constantinople, was made~in Paris like eau-de-cologne. The
30 I,II | gave him confidence. In Paris confidence is accepted~as
31 I,II | Ferdinand, thrown~upon Paris, led a filibustering life
32 I,II | then a perfumer's clerk in Paris, where he turned up after~
33 I,II | remodel~the municipality of Paris. The prefect wished to nominate
34 I,II | the higher bourgeoisie of Paris.~ ~Cesar was now forty years
35 I,II | a gaby in the streets of Paris. His lips were very thick,
36 I,II | villager transplanted to Paris. His powerful hairy hands,
37 I,II | the beautiful statue to Paris.~In a few months sorrows
38 I,III| Roguin, who soon after left Paris in consequence~of political
39 I,III| sharpest speculators in Paris; he had secured the friendship
40 I,III| who have~little time in Paris to make plans; life is too
41 I,IV | man had~dreamed of art; in Paris he thought of fortune. Government
42 I,IV | a written agreement."~ ~"Paris is the only place in the
43 I,IV | the elasticity, so rare in~Paris, that fills and rounds the
44 I,IV | is the thing they call in Paris /mind/ to a class whose~
45 I,IV | that exists nowhere but in Paris, like a certain~lichen which
46 I,IV | regulates the~dwellings of Paris in an infinite number of
47 I,IV | But~at night no spot in Paris is more deserted; it might
48 I,IV | deputies of the~city of Paris in much esteem;: he called
49 I,IV | member of the municipality of Paris, believe me I should have
50 I,IV | well-known in the notariat of Paris; but I have my own little
51 I,IV | come to letting houses in Paris, nothing is~unimportant.
52 I,IV | of petty trades, of which Paris knows as little as a man
53 I,V | become the finest quarter of Paris."~ ~"Some day, Cesar!"~ ~"
54 I,VI | hat-trade and the /article-~Paris/, this prince of travellers
55 I,VI | of finding him still in Paris sent the lover flying into
56 I,VI | seize upon the only nuts in Paris? Where did you~find these
57 I,VI | enthusiasm throughout France. In Paris the members of the~municipal
58 I,VI | famous thoroughfare of old Paris~where French history has
59 I,VI | quartier des Lombards, Paris.~ ~"/It is requested that
60 I,VII| since become common in Paris,~was then a novelty. At
61 I,VII| coming from Touraine to Paris with hob-nailed shoes and
62 I,VII| was~that of the priests of Paris, and he allowed himself
63 I,VII| to accept a benefice in Paris, humble as it was. As he
64 I,VII| the wife of a notary of Paris.~ ~Uncle Pillerault, who
65 I,II | peaceful confidence. In Paris the~astringent stage of
66 I,II | the~Chamber as a deputy of Paris.~ ~The banker was Liberal,
67 I,II | walk through the streets of Paris. For the~first time he was
68 I,II | conspicuous spots in all Paris. No one could avoid coming~
69 I,II | Oil. Every hair-dresser in~Paris, and all the perfumers,
70 I,II | soon not a newspaper in Paris which did not~mention Cephalic
71 I,II | at the top of~them.~ ~In Paris, Finot fired at Macassar
72 I,II | the lesser tradesmen of Paris, was~ignorant of the habits
73 I,II | ordinary commerce, there is in~Paris a class of secondary houses,
74 I,III| days along the pavements of~Paris, and which was now pulled
75 I,III| despicable in the marts of Paris the honorable and virtuous~
76 I,IV | and~madame had started for Paris. Birotteau returned home,
77 I,IV | once walked the streets of Paris with his head high and his~
78 I,IV | concerns every landlord in Paris."~ ~Birotteau went out,
79 I,IV | Cesar dead?~Had he left Paris on the scent of some last
80 I,V | merchant-perfumer, living in Paris, Rue Saint-Honore,~no. 397,
81 I,V | price of all~the land in Paris by pouncing upon it, he
82 I,V | largest linen-drapers~in Paris, who was about to open a
83 I,VI | yet there is not in all Paris a commercial~passion able
84 I,VI | understand how it constitutes in Paris a monstrous legal~farce;
85 I,VI | judge-commissioner himself. No one out of Paris knows, and no~one in Paris
86 I,VI | Paris knows, and no~one in Paris does not know, that a judge
87 I,VI | own justice at any moment.~Paris has seen the president of
88 I,VI | rule, the petty trades of Paris are guiltless in~this respect.
89 I,VI | is so well understood in Paris, that~unless a merchant
90 I,VI | liquidations than bankruptcies in~Paris.~ ~The assignee's act in
91 I,VI | Time is~so precious in Paris that it is customary, when
92 I,VI | the largest failures in Paris are so~vigorously handled
93 I,VI | seldom seen in the~markets of Paris. Thus the creditors, knowing
94 I,VI | witness a deed so rare in~Paris."~ ~Pillerault, Ragon, and
95 I,VII| hillside in the~neighborhood of Paris, and from which the Vallee-aux-Loups
96 I,VII| poor Cesar is so rare in Paris that his~conduct by degrees
97 I,VII| in the bankrupt court of Paris~that seldom more than one
98 I,VII| most imposing edifices in~Paris, and the approach to it
99 I,VII| great injury of the city of Paris. It has been~reserved for
100 I,VII| to behold the~notariat of Paris abandoning the glorious
101 I,VII| The flight of a notary of Paris who carried off the funds
102 I,VII| degrade the commerce of Paris. The~creditors of Birotteau
103 Add | Distinguished Provincial at Paris~A Bachelor's Establishment~
104 Add | Distinguished Provincial at Paris~A Bachelor's Establishment~
105 Add | Distinguished Provincial at Paris~A Bachelor's Establishment~
106 Add | Distinguished Provincial at Paris~Scenes from a Courtesan'
107 Add | Distinguished Provincial at Paris~A Start in Life~Scenes from
108 Add | Distinguished Provincial at Paris~The Firm of Nucingen~Cousin
109 Add | Distinguished Provincial at Paris~Scenes from a Courtesan'
110 Add | Distinguished Provincial at Paris~The Commission in Lunacy~
111 Add | Distinguished Provincial at Paris~The Ball at Sceaux~ ~Popinot,
112 Add | Distinguished Provincial at Paris~The Secrets of a Princess~
113 Add | Distinguished Provincial at Paris~Letters of Two Brides~A
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