Part, Chapter
1 I,I | wide awake, she forgot her daughter peacefully asleep in an
2 I,I | louder than another. His daughter is~never considered before
3 I,I | door of the room where her daughter was in bed.~ ~"Cesarine
4 I,I | the occasion to marry our daughter; sell the~business, and
5 I,I | better to come and visit our daughter~after she is married to
6 I,I | thousand francs a year to your daughter and we can keep two~thousand
7 I,I | business to establish our daughter, and I am willing; I would
8 I,I | of poverty, neither your~daughter nor I will make you a single
9 I,II | happiness of his brother's daughter, made inquiries which resulted
10 I,II | education of~Cesarine, an only daughter, idolized by Constance as
11 I,II | passionately watched; an only daughter, incapable of despising
12 I,II | embroidered by his wife or daughter, which~hung down beneath
13 I,II | for~his wife and for his daughter.~ ~As for Madame Cesar,
14 I,III| perfumer and the beauty of the~daughter were immense obstacles in
15 I,III| of distance between the daughter of a perfumer and~himself,
16 I,III| marriage, the charming and only daughter of the~banker Chevrel conceived
17 I,III| obtain the offer of her~daughter's hand by way of compensation
18 I,III| which were laid by for my daughter's portion."~ ~"Very good,"
19 I,III| motto. If you don't win my daughter, at least you will win your~
20 I,III| am resolved to leave my daughter mistress of~herself, even
21 I,IV | gown, here came out of her daughter's bedroom,~where she had
22 I,IV | Constance re-entering her daughter's~room, where she threw
23 I,IV | Cesarine's shoulder.~ ~"Ah, my daughter!" she cried, "your father
24 I,IV | know that the perfumer's daughter~was not ignorant of the
25 I,IV | and pointing out to her daughter, the~fantastic movements
26 I,V | upon me, it will be your~daughter's fortune that you will
27 I,V | pretty," he said to his daughter.~ ~"Papa, you must say beautiful,
28 I,V | you."~ ~"Upon my word! a daughter who scolds her father! Well,
29 I,V | you every day, my wife and daughter and I, as we ought to pray
30 I,V | place myself, my~wife, my daughter, and the son-in-law I expect
31 I,V | leaving Cesar, his wife~and daughter to finish their dinner alone
32 I,V | suspicions.~ ~"Well, my little daughter," he said, "this nut will
33 I,V | as to set a trap for his daughter, yet his paternal~tenderness
34 I,V | by his wife, nor by his daughter.~ ~When Birotteau encountered
35 I,VI | merchant! he shall have my daughter!," muttered Cesar.~ ~"I
36 I,VI | flatter both father and daughter?~Well, well, so be it; Oil
37 I,VI | and bring your wife and~daughter."~ ~"Charmed with the honor
38 I,VII| Mademoiselle Lourdois, the daughter of the~house-painter. She
39 I,VII| Cesar, his wife, and his daughter, for the purpose of making
40 I,VII| Comtesse de Fontaine, and their~daughter, Mademoiselle Emilie de
41 I,VII| friends of Ragon, and their daughter, who, they tell me, is to~
42 I,VII| Madame Lourdois and their~daughter; Monsieur Claparon, banker;
43 I,VII| invitations for himself,~his wife, daughter, mother-in-law, and aunt.
44 I,VII| architect, as he~kissed his daughter.~ ~"Oh! of course, of course,
45 I,VII| that Constance promised her daughter not to poison her husband'
46 I,VII| the gentle firmness of the daughter of Louis XVI. to induce~
47 I,VII| Birotteau, his wife, and daughter made haste to~prevent such
48 I,VII| pang the hope of seeing her~daughter the wife of a notary of
49 I,I | neither his wife nor his daughter nor the~clerks should suspect
50 I,I | me to-morrow. I marry my~daughter to little Crottat; he wants
51 I,I | not made."~ ~The wife and daughter entreated Cesar to go to
52 I,II | you think of your wife and daughter, you will do me justice."~ ~
53 I,II | Francois Keller, that his~daughter took him out for a walk
54 I,II | have not seen," said his daughter, "the frame which Monsieur~
55 I,II | Birotteau merely said to his~daughter,--~ ~"Little Popinot is
56 I,III| who insulted me, and his~daughter whose hand once seemed to
57 I,III| apparently, that his~wife and daughter should be at liberty to
58 I,III| what is what in love. The~daughter of "The Queen of Roses"
59 I,III| perceiving that mother and daughter~had the one purpose of bewitching
60 I,III| Constance, in a grave voice; "my~daughter will be the wife of a man
61 I,III| of Madame Ragon and her~daughter, though she would not tell
62 I,III| his wife's hand and his~daughter's, adding, "Ah, my dear
63 I,IV | wild-goose chase to his wife and~daughter he was amazed to find his
64 I,IV | mother~was weeping.~ ~"Dear daughter, I see a failure coming.
65 I,IV | deposit your wife, your daughter, your~umbrella, everything
66 I,IV | Remember that if you~love his daughter you must not--in the very
67 I,IV | behind her counter, her daughter~embroidering beside her.
68 I,V | he said. "If~you loved a daughter of mine, had she a million
69 I,V | hearing of his uncle, his daughter, and Popinot, the sublime
70 I,V | the care of his wife~and daughter. Just at that moment Celestin,
71 I,V | it aloud to his wife and~daughter in a trembling voice:--~ ~
72 I,V | also that of your wife and daughter. I wish you, one and all,~
73 I,V | Besides,~they belong to our daughter, and will enable us to live;
74 I,V | Cesar's state, mother and daughter sat plying~their needles
75 I,V | and~gentle wife, a tender daughter, two good friends,--your
76 I,V | you shall never marry the daughter of a bankrupt."~ ~Anselme
77 I,V | much more, and perhaps your~daughter also. The situation is not
78 I,V | our true friends."~ ~The daughter at last eased the pain of
79 I,V | him. Then the mother and~daughter, plainly dressed, left the
80 I,V | wept when he heard what his daughter was to become. Then he held
81 I,VI | the mother has married her daughter.~ ~If the certificate of
82 I,VI | day Cesar, his wife, and daughter understood each~other. The
83 I,VI | beings,--father,~mother, daughter,--bound together by the
84 I,VI | and that of~his wife and daughter. He walked the streets with
85 I,VII| account."~ ~"Your wife and daughter ought to have some reward.
86 I,VII| coach with his wife and daughter, and Popinot who escorted
87 I,VII| savings of your wife, your daughter, and yourself, for~the last
88 I,VII| yourself, also your wife and daughter."~ ~"Take a little more
89 I,VII| Cesarine is thine! My daughter will be happy at last. She
90 I,VII| her mother to~injure my daughter; and besides, I can speak
91 I,VII| He had actually seen his daughter, his wife, and Popinot.
92 I,VII| no right to~immolate your daughter."~ ~A vehement discussion
93 I,VII| But how came my wife and daughter to be in our old appartement?"~
94 I,VII| but it would be selling my~daughter."~ ~"And I wish to be bought!"
95 I,VII| Do you~want to kill your daughter?"~ ~"Kill my daughter!"
96 I,VII| your daughter?"~ ~"Kill my daughter!" said Cesar, thunderstruck.~ ~"
97 I,VII| merchant, his wife, and his daughter of all that they~possessed,
98 I,VII| weeping.~ ~"His wife and his daughter poured their earnings into
99 Add | Vendetta~The Firm of Nucingen~A Daughter of Eve~ ~Birotteau, Cesar~
100 Add | from a Courtesan's Life~A Daughter of Eve~Cousin Pons~ ~Grindot~
101 Add | Another Study of Woman~A Daughter of Eve~The Member for Arcis~ ~
102 Add | Pierrette~A Second Home~A Daughter of Eve~ ~Saillard, Madame~
103 Add | Secrets of a Princess~A Daughter of Eve~The Member for Arcis~
104 Add | Sceaux~Ursule Mirouet~A Daughter of Eve~ ~Vandenesse, Comte
105 Add | The Gondreville Mystery~A Daughter of Eve~ ~Werbrust~The Firm
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