Part, Chapter
1 I,I | mere~commonplace in the day when scientific men are
2 I,I | in the course of a whole day. The poignant tale of her~
3 I,I | you see that as plain as day,~wouldn't it shut your mouth?"~ ~"
4 I,I | barely enough~to live on. (Day after day that poor household
5 I,I | enough~to live on. (Day after day that poor household wrings
6 I,II | retained in his head. The day came when he knew all the~
7 I,II | the investment on the very~day before the paper began its
8 I,II | satisfaction. From that~day forward he watched the movement
9 I,II | expiring Convention.~ ~On that day Cesar had the honor of fighting
10 I,II | overpowering effect. On a fine June day, crossing~by the Pont-Marie
11 I,II | enterprise, he was lounging one day~along the boulevard on his
12 I,II | on the calendar for that day, and fed and brought him~
13 I,II | house. On the following day, Sunday, they~received their
14 I,II | discovering the error. The next day Birotteau~scolded Popinot
15 I,III| escape them. At the dawn of day he slipped out~noiselessly,
16 I,III| Roses," hoping~he might some day succeed Birotteau. Anselme
17 I,III| him at~that hour of the day,--Popinot felt sure that
18 I,III| whom he had~loved from the day when he was taken into Birotteau'
19 I,III| happy; did he not dine every day beside~Cesarine? So, while
20 I,III| something against a rainy day, by~persuading his clients
21 I,III| broken chalice. He went every day to the Champs Elysees returning
22 I,III| not one to be settled in a day. Cesarine is~her own mistress,
23 I,IV | finished on the appointed day," said Birotteau. "If not,~
24 I,IV | them on the morning of the day~they fell due. The debtor
25 I,IV | Molineux thought night and day of how he could dislodge
26 I,V | shall sign the papers the day after~to-morrow, for to-morrow
27 I,V | shall never believe that the day on which the Son of God
28 I,V | by man can be a fortunate day. Why, we ourselves stop
29 I,V | man~who will count this day among the finest in his
30 I,V | lips. We pray~for you every day, my wife and daughter and
31 I,V | to dine with us on that~day. Your presence would double
32 I,V | that the receipts for the day amounted to more than six
33 I,V | the little events of the day, and related what he had
34 I,V | the~Madeleine will some day become the finest quarter
35 I,V | quarter of Paris."~ ~"Some day, Cesar!"~ ~"Alas!" he said,
36 I,V | revolutionize our~home. From this day forth there will be one
37 I,V | love her~madly to her dying day; his fondness would inspire
38 I,V | Celestin.~ ~"Oh, what a day! my dear fellow, what a
39 I,V | my dear fellow, what a day! I am set up in business,~
40 I,VI | torchlight--for there were day workmen and night workmen--~
41 I,VI | event.~ ~On Sunday, the day Cesar had appointed to conclude
42 I,VI | young people of the~present day who have had the happiness
43 I,VI | went to see them every day,--and here we are,~virtually
44 I,VI | necessary to use lights in open day. The embryo~merchant had
45 I,VI | thousand, to the present day (another /piece justificative/):--~ ~ ~
46 I,VII| pomegranate.~ ~"This is to be a day of deeds, then?" said the
47 I,VII| preparations, carried on night and day, had given~rise. Some said
48 I,VII| alarmed Madame~Birotteau, and day by day her face grew sadder
49 I,VII| Madame~Birotteau, and day by day her face grew sadder as
50 I,VII| week before the fateful day, Braschon, Grindot,~Lourdois,
51 I,VII| suit~of clothes for the day of the ball, if he mounted
52 I,VII| observing her uneasiness~on the day before the great event, "
53 I,VII| he was working~night and day with a fury that was almost
54 I,VII| to give herself up to one day of unalloyed happiness,~
55 I,VII| which the~angels would some day carry to God in all its
56 I,VII| three thousand francs. The day began to~dawn, the wax lights
57 I,I | notes."~ ~"Send to me on the day after to-morrow," said Birotteau
58 I,I | doctor had seen much in his day, and he caught the meaning
59 I,I | hundred thousand myself the day before.~Our mutual confidence
60 I,I | hands or in mine until the day came to pay for the land,~
61 I,I | to pay over to Roguin the day~before the latter's flight,
62 I,I | answer to Claparon, on the day when his catchpenny~banker
63 I,II | adventurer who lives from day to day, he saw only the
64 I,II | adventurer who lives from day to day, he saw only the present
65 I,II | The following day Cesar went to Francois Keller'
66 I,II | about the session of the day before,~and the impromptu
67 I,II | insects who seek the falling day or the half-shadows of a~
68 I,II | with him to-morrow or the~day after, at five in the morning,--
69 I,III| deeply~engaged for the whole day, preparing a tender for
70 I,III| lotteries, hoping that some day she could bestow a~good
71 I,III| together if you have only one day to do it in?"~ ~"I will
72 I,IV | would receive~him the next day, 13th, at noon. Though every
73 I,IV | its drop of~absinthe, the day went by with frightful rapidity.
74 I,IV | would not wait one zingle day longer."~ ~"Monsieur le
75 I,IV | matter; it happens every~day that those who undertake
76 I,IV | had been elegant in its day, Claparon, at the entrance~
77 I,IV | During the whole of~that day the courageous creature
78 I,V | indigestion,~and on the fourth day we may be admitted to the
79 I,V | in heaven; GIVE US THIS DAY OUR~DAILY BREAD; and forgive
80 I,V | is passing~away; that one day we shall be rewarded for
81 I,V | paying it back at all in the day~of prosperity which ere
82 I,V | give it back to me on the day when I can wear it without~
83 I,V | me as her husband, on the~day when you have retrieved
84 I,V | passed for as honest as the day should play those worn-out,
85 I,V | interview at a~later hour of the day. In the interval she went
86 I,VI | done, the court appoints a day~for a meeting of the creditors,
87 I,VI | cent on his loss. From that day forth he~bowed to his debtor
88 I,VI | be compared to the last day of a criminal condemned
89 I,VI | power to make that terrible day~endurable to his nephew.~ ~
90 I,VI | business as clear as the day. All were pleased to find
91 I,VI | the morning of the solemn day, Pillerault said to his~
92 I,VI | Hall of~Bankruptcy. The day and the hour had been chosen
93 I,VI | After that fatal day Cesar, his wife, and daughter
94 I,VII| was the anniversary of the day on which Constance~had consented
95 I,VII| coquetry, the beauty of the day, the charm of the landscape,~
96 I,VII| delicious memory of the happiest day of~all his youth, loosened
97 I,VII| belong to one another on the day when your~father is restored
98 I,VII| of debt. I work for that day~with all the strength that
99 I,VII| quite natural.~ ~The next day Birotteau went to find Madame
100 I,VII| worn Cesar answered one~day to his friend Matifat.~ ~*****~ ~
101 I,VII| been dismissed.~On the very day my husband was about to
102 I,VII| her heart.~ ~*****~ ~This day was destined to be a day
103 I,VII| day was destined to be a day of joy to Cesar. The private~
104 I,VII| not live till the great day when the decree for his~
105 I,VII| the~joys of this festal day. Just as Cesar finished
106 I,VII| to toil for the glorious day~which has at length dawned
107 I,VII| ball on the~evening of the day appointed for signing the
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