Part, Chapter
1 I,I | Monsieur Cesar Birotteau, a perfumer established near the~Place
2 I,I | anguish.~ ~She then saw the perfumer in the middle of the next
3 I,I | here I am," answered the perfumer, coming into the~bedroom.~ ~"
4 I,I | name,~'Cesar Birotteau, Perfumer, Successor to Ragon,' and
5 I,I | certainly have talent~as a perfumer, we should now be petty
6 I,I | formally~object. You are perfumer: be a perfumer, and not
7 I,I | You are perfumer: be a perfumer, and not a speculator in
8 I,II | became deputy-~mayor and perfumer, retired officer of the
9 I,II | Monsieur Ragon, formerly perfumer to her majesty Queen Marie-~
10 I,II | business. Moreover, like~a true perfumer, he hated the revolution
11 I,II | carried the belligerent perfumer~to "The Queen of Roses,"
12 I,II | purely and simply, a royalist perfumer,~and never more to compromise
13 I,II | marriage contract, gave the new perfumer some sound advice, and~prevented
14 I,II | staggered our ambitious perfumer; all costs~calculated, he
15 I,II | accordingly patronized~the perfumer, and allowed him to call
16 I,II | Petit-Matelot, and was the~first perfumer to display that redundancy
17 I,II | complexion, the Sieur Birotteau, perfumer,~favorably known in this
18 I,II | successor to Ragon,~former perfumer to the Queen Marie Antoinette,
19 I,II | the new appartement. The perfumer had just~been elected judge
20 I,II | give to higher studies, the perfumer had~become a merely practical
21 I,II | which he deals. Birotteau, perfumer, did not~know an iota of
22 I,II | esteem bestowed upon the perfumer in a community where~women
23 I,II | commercial~traveller, then a perfumer's clerk in Paris, where
24 I,II | the poor-box?" asked the perfumer, laughing.~ ~Roguin replied
25 I,II | had taken the louis. The perfumer~opened his ledger and found
26 I,II | to make his fortune. The perfumer and his clerk passed the~
27 I,II | observed~the indignation of the perfumer, who repressed his anger
28 I,II | Thanks to his wife, the perfumer would only accept the place
29 I,III| though the wealth of the perfumer and the beauty of the~daughter
30 I,III| between the daughter of a perfumer and~himself, the scion of
31 I,III| did not perceive that~the perfumer's clerk had flung it round
32 I,III| whose object was to ruin the perfumer, had made Roguin understand
33 I,III| property paid over by the~perfumer and his associates, could
34 I,III| caught sight of him; when the perfumer did see him, Roguin held
35 I,III| clouded~the face of the perfumer, and which Roguin had been
36 I,III| right, Anselme!" said the perfumer, as a tear rolled down his~
37 I,III| at your age," cried the perfumer; "that was my~motto. If
38 I,IV | ground-floor and let the rich perfumer~take the floor above it,
39 I,IV | francs.~ ~"Ah!" said the perfumer turning them over. "Small
40 I,IV | Am I a usurer?" asked the perfumer reproachfully.~ ~"What can
41 I,IV | those signatures," said the perfumer.~ ~"We have such queer names
42 I,IV | Monsieur Grindot,"~said the perfumer, catching sight of the young
43 I,IV | him,--either to serve~the perfumer well, or put him under contribution.
44 I,IV | his head as if to show the~perfumer that he caught his ideas.
45 I,IV | me perfectly," said the perfumer, surprised.~ ~"To carry
46 I,IV | little/ alteration."~ ~The perfumer slipped behind his wife
47 I,IV | architect know that the perfumer's daughter~was not ignorant
48 I,IV | is very simple," said the perfumer, who was used to~the quick
49 I,IV | not so sharp," said the perfumer. "It would not be~possible
50 I,IV | queens together?"~ ~"I am a perfumer, and what is more I am deputy-mayor
51 I,IV | calico, without a belt.~ ~The perfumer, lost in thought, was ruminating
52 I,V | wife's presentiments.~ ~The perfumer went up the seventy-eight
53 I,V | have my secret," said the perfumer. "I've let loose the~word /
54 I,V | real effect upon hair. No perfumer has ever dreamed of it.
55 I,V | academician knew that the perfumer and deputy-mayor was high
56 I,V | between a chemist and a~perfumer."~ ~"Ah, monsieur! between
57 I,V | which I am ignorant as a perfumer can be."~ ~"Let me hear
58 I,V | voluble~gratitude of the perfumer.~ ~"Ta, ta, ta!" exclaimed
59 I,V | science smiled and rose; the perfumer and Popinot rose~also.~ ~"
60 I,V | Monsieur Vauquelin," said the perfumer, taking the chemist's hand.~"
61 I,V | your goodness?" said the perfumer.~ ~"What's that?" exclaimed
62 I,V | swells with joy!" cried the perfumer, when he got into the~street. "
63 I,V | are you joking?"~ ~The perfumer, as well as the clerks,
64 I,V | Now, then," cried the perfumer, to his clerks, when he
65 I,VI | millionaires!"~cried the perfumer, extending his hand to his
66 I,VI | satisfied with me?" said the perfumer.~"I have given him the secret
67 I,VI | of Cesar Birotteau. The perfumer rushed headlong to~the little
68 I,VII| of deeds, then?" said the perfumer, when the~greetings were
69 I,VII| the judge went up to the perfumer's temporary~bedroom on the
70 I,VII| the famous Chevet and the~perfumer. Chevet furnished superb
71 I,VII| and aunt. He called the perfumer~Monsieur le chevalier to
72 I,VII| That's right," said the perfumer; "you appreciate me at last."~ ~
73 I,VII| various~apartments, which the perfumer and his wife dared not show
74 I,VII| amusement from the ball of their~perfumer, were detached from the
75 I,VII| impertinent young woman to the perfumer. "I~congratulate you."~ ~
76 I,VII| his~arrangements with the perfumer, without which, he said,
77 I,VII| buttonhole~of an honest perfumer. If misfortunes were to
78 I,I | moment, and bowed to the perfumer, looking about him with
79 I,I | I would have," said the perfumer, "a court of irremovable
80 I,I | who thought the worthy perfumer a strong and able man, was~
81 I,I | difficulty.~ ~"Xandrot," said the perfumer, in a voice choked with
82 I,II | had anywhere," said the perfumer, aloud.~ ~He bit his lips,
83 I,II | Birotteau was Royalist; but the perfumer~judged by his own heart,
84 I,II | creditors. The demonstrative perfumer, who told his dear~Constance,
85 I,II | the restored~Bourbons. The perfumer, like all the lesser tradesmen
86 I,II | superiority dazzled the perfumer, as light~blinds those insects
87 I,II | over the paper, the poor~perfumer felt something that was
88 I,II | brother--"~ ~He conducted the perfumer to the door of the salon,
89 I,II | on the appearance of the~perfumer. When Birotteau had explained
90 I,III| poor, amazed, bewildered perfumer sit~down at a corner of
91 I,III| wide, and complimented the perfumer on his~perspicacity and
92 I,III| look at the distinguished perfumer, the~decorated deputy-mayor,
93 I,IV | of~that kind," said the perfumer, not knowing whether she
94 I,IV | a searching~look at the perfumer. "You see all der vorld
95 I,IV | which~made even the innocent perfumer suspect his morals.~ ~"Sit
96 I,IV | Claparon, recollecting the~perfumer's ball, and thinking to
97 I,IV | was not aware of it. The perfumer, who was~annoyed at finding
98 I,IV | for he guessed that the perfumer would soon try to get rid
99 I,IV | Lombards, and when he~saw the perfumer re-enter Anselme's door,
100 I,V | what that poor~devil of a perfumer has done to him; for my
101 I,VI | like Birotteau, he is a perfumer;~or, in the evenings, at
102 I,VI | sellers. The interests of~the perfumer in the house of Popinot
103 I,VI | could see no~vestige of the perfumer. Even careless minds gained
104 I,VII| Poor man!" said the perfumer's former neighbor; "he gave
105 I,VII| lose his mind.~ ~The late perfumer re-entered the Bourse leaning
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