Part, Chapter
1 I,I | furniture, which is worth a great deal, we shall live~like
2 I,I | fool (though you think me a great fool, you do) as~not to
3 I,II | men--men who are really great in the sense~that they never
4 I,II | divide themselves into two great classes, indicated by the~
5 I,II | eloquence. Thus he pleased that great~majority, mediocre by nature,
6 I,II | other human beings; the~great tragedian ate raw meat,
7 I,II | regarding~Vauquelin as a great man, he thought him an exception,--
8 I,II | reckoned a genius--had made great efforts to get employed~
9 I,II | successor.~ ~Ferdinand had so great an influence on the destinies
10 I,II | which belonged only to~the great world. Ferdinand had entered
11 I,II | Keller and with~several other great banking-houses. No one knew
12 I,II | without opening his lips. His great experience in~commercial
13 I,II | nor the writers in the~great drama will listen to the
14 I,II | dreams, and shows us that all great~events are summed up in
15 I,III| Sub-~Providence, plays so great a part in this history that
16 I,III| beginning he~encountered, at no great expense, grisettes who were
17 I,III| been to make the will of a great personage who has only~eight
18 I,III| with one word decided on a great undertaking;~no man is master
19 I,III| then?"~ ~"They do me the great pleasure of accepting my
20 I,III| You are about to~receive a great recompense for your fidelity
21 I,III| consolation~for not being a great man. Look at those gentlemen
22 I,III| minute, Popinot. I~give a great ball three weeks hence;
23 I,IV | and the possessor of a great~talent. Monsieur is the
24 I,IV | very few Dutchmen, but a great many grocers. The appartements
25 I,IV | cap in~hand, until the great Birotteau was seated.~ ~"
26 I,IV | early."~ ~"You're in as great a hurry as a bride! Well,
27 I,V | thoughtful~people he was a great observer; he let people
28 I,V | pure man,~General Foy a great one, Casimir Perier without
29 I,V | respect for women~was so great that he would not let her
30 I,V | ignorant as they were of the great~project revolving in the
31 I,V | quantity of white oil, a great~deal of greenish oil, iron,
32 I,V | it. How amazing! God is great, Monsieur Vauquelin."~ ~"
33 I,V | follicular organ," resumed the great chemist,--~"a species of
34 I,V | I have~coincided with a great man. Macassar is overthrown!
35 I,V | remember it still."~ ~"What a great man! what a glance, what
36 I,V | Cesarine,~proclaimed some great event and gave color to
37 I,V | high hope is the proof of a great love.~ ~"Where is he going?"
38 I,V | Gentlemen, lend a hand!~a great feat! We must move, during
39 I,VI | the judge had once done a great service to the~cleverest
40 I,VI | the dusky labyrinth of the great market, thinking how to
41 I,VI | hats. Andoche, who has a great deal of wit,--he got~it
42 I,VI | when he~received beautiful great ladies at the door of his
43 I,VI | the tight sleeves, and the great kerchief~/a la Julie/ which
44 I,VI | given him the secret of a great discovery--"~ ~"We know
45 I,VI | said Birotteau; "I got my great ideas when~sauntering on
46 I,VI | current of affairs.~All men of great talent lead curious lives,
47 I,VI | himself up.~ ~"You do a great deal of business?" said
48 I,VI | to the /statu quo/ of the great man who guides the destinies~
49 I,VI | and spacious shop, with~great iron-bound doors, painted
50 I,VI | we wish to be something great, we~must begin by being
51 I,VII| face grew sadder as the great solemnity~drew near.~ ~In
52 I,VII| Anselme says he will be a great man; he has a mind like~
53 I,VII| uneasiness~on the day before the great event, "Chevet, Tanrade,
54 I,VII| Monsieur de Lacepede is a great man,--yes, as~great as Monsieur
55 I,VII| is a great man,--yes, as~great as Monsieur Vauquelin; he
56 I,VII| appartement will win you great distinction," said~Constance
57 I,VII| the difference between~the great world and the bourgeoisie
58 I,VII| represented a sphere in the great world, were then exactly
59 I,VII| acquired the manners of the great world,~little La Billardiere,
60 I,VII| us through the~skies, the great magician, with a deep mysterious
61 I,I | Molineux; "the law leaves a great deal~too much latitude.
62 I,I | said Chaffaroux, "we are in great need of money."~ ~"Well,
63 I,I | street coach, not without great difficulty.~ ~"Xandrot,"
64 I,I | the~school of Moliere, a great practitioner and in favor
65 I,I | Monsieur Birotteau, I take too great an interest in you,"~said
66 I,I | of a man with whom I do a great deal of business,--Pere~
67 I,I | pains and affections. In great crises, the physical~powers
68 I,II | public, what seemed to him a great stroke, and seek out the
69 I,II | for an interview with the great Francois Keller, that his~
70 I,II | Cesar was absorbed in his great enterprise.~ ~"Ah, true!
71 I,II | advertisement, of which he made so great and so judicious a~use.
72 I,II | impromptu speech of the great man. In the course of two
73 I,II | would rise and face the great orator, and say~to him, "
74 I,II | from the~flatteries of the great man. He regretted that an
75 I,III| piece of property which the great orator~thought of buying.
76 I,III| Adolphe, "my brother feels a great interest in you; he~spoke
77 I,III| about the cupidity of the great~banking-houses, their harshness,
78 I,III| once in three months, on great~festive occasions. Du Tillet
79 I,III| would not~send you to the great banking princes. The Kellers
80 I,III| indefinable sinking~which succeeds great moral struggles in which
81 I,III| Cinq-Diamants, had undergone a great~change in two months. The
82 I,III| he is devoted! We owe a~great deal to my uncle. The newspapers
83 I,III| recently adopted in the great~world.~ ~Cesarine was sure
84 I,IV | ambition was to rival the great ladies~of the Faubourg Saint-Germain,
85 I,IV | spoke of the ball with great admiration, which is all
86 I,IV | in dis vay--" said~this great and good and venerable financier,
87 I,IV | such little sacrifices and great humiliations, common~to
88 I,IV | He can receive the great people," said Claparon; "
89 I,IV | to say I'm cogitating a~great enterprise--in champagne."~ ~
90 I,V | nephew. "I have thought a great deal~of this," he added. "
91 I,V | Oil will~undoubtedly make great returns. Popinot and I have
92 I,V | Gigonnet,~"but on behalf of the great Birotteau. Well, what is
93 I,V | seemed to them excused by his great passion; the other they~
94 I,V | gracious welcome of this great lord, who belonged to~the
95 I,VI | sixty-five per cent. Gobseck, the great Gobseck,~received scarcely
96 I,VI | integrity. In the midst of a great misfortune~you have been
97 I,VI | I would~give them with a great deal of pleasure to witness
98 I,VII| still on~the morrow of his great disaster.~ ~"Go and take
99 I,VII| judge.~ ~To forget is the great secret of strong, creative
100 I,VII| that," she said, showing great distress.~ ~"No," said Popinot,
101 I,VII| should not live till the great day when the decree for
102 I,VII| sombre and romantic. The great hall of the Pas Perdus,
103 I,VII| detriment of~justice and the great injury of the city of Paris.
104 I,VII| borne in~triumph down the great stairway to his coach.~ ~"
105 I,VII| measure in the finale of the great~symphony rang forth in his
106 Add | Start in Life~Gaudissart the Great~The Firm of Nucingen~ ~Fontaine,
107 Add | Honorine~Gaudissart the Great~ ~Gobseck, Jean-Esther Van~
108 Add | Anselme~Gaudissart the Great~Cousin Pons~Cousin Betty~ ~
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