Part, Chapter
1 I,I | together in this bed, in~this house, it has never happened that
2 I,I | if he were going to a bad house. He fears God for~God's
3 I,I | first floor of the next house, and open a door into it~
4 I,I | staircase so as to pass from house to~house on one floor; and
5 I,I | as to pass from house to~house on one floor; and we shall
6 I,I | thousand crowns a year, with a house which we both like,--all
7 I,I | name of Popinot, in some house near the Rue des Lombards,~
8 I,I | I can~make an honorable house among the bourgeoisie of
9 I,I | former times. I can found the house of Birotteau, like the house
10 I,I | house of Birotteau, like the house of~Keller, or Jules Desmartes,
11 I,I | architect who is to alter our house, is in despair that he has~
12 I,I | Give your ball, remodel~the house, spend ten thousand francs
13 I,I | if I exclude him from my house,--a clerk for~whom I endorsed
14 I,I | first floor of the next~house?--which is all settled with
15 I,II | who was forced to keep house of a Sunday,~opened a conversation
16 I,II | becoming chief tenant of the house where they had hitherto~
17 I,II | sleeping partners in the house of Matifat, the Abbe~Loraux,
18 I,II | keep silence and watch the house. On the following day, Sunday,
19 I,II | had won the money, at the house of a banker,~from du Tillet,
20 I,II | the best~terms with the house of Nucingen, to which Roguin
21 I,III| the living sign of the house, whom he had~loved from
22 I,III| attending to the business of the house, he threw a~zeal and energy
23 I,III| in 1815. Roguin~bought a house for her in the Champs-Elysees,
24 I,III| when he saw, at Birotteau's house, the~relations existing
25 I,III| the~head, namely, of the house of Claparon.~ ~The fate
26 I,III| forget it. You leave my house to-morrow. I am not~angry
27 I,III| one to found a~commercial house in the high-class druggist
28 I,IV | the private door of his house.~ ~Four years earlier Monsieur
29 I,IV | the same level in the next house, by~turning the staircase,
30 I,IV | as to open a way from one house to the other~on the street
31 I,IV | little porter's lodge. Your~house shall be studied and remodelled /
32 I,IV | the lease of the adjoining house is made over to me, and
33 I,IV | husband is master in his own~house,--give him time to reflect."~ ~"
34 I,IV | He is going to pitch the house out of windows and build
35 I,IV | the owner of the adjoining~house, Cesar wished to get from
36 I,IV | As he left the notary's house, he saw du Tillet at the
37 I,IV | lower floor of a yellow~house, which was falling to ruins,
38 I,IV | turn leading to his uncle's house in~the Rue des Bourdonnais,
39 I,V | the fourth floor of an old house.~ ~Just as the moral nature
40 I,V | street. "He comes to my house! I am afraid I've forgotten
41 I,V | The improvements in the house are ordered, the~dignity
42 I,V | herald the creation of the house of A. Popinot and~Company,
43 I,VI | liege-vassal forever to the house of~Popinot.~ ~While waiting
44 I,VI | Popinot returned to his aunt's house, where he was to sleep,
45 I,VI | everything; and soon the house, and the heart of~Constance,
46 I,VI | francs, you occupy your own house, and you can do what you
47 I,VI | them with any of your pot-~house principles."~ ~This lecture
48 I,VI | guides the destinies~of the house of Austria, jolly dog! Hold
49 I,VI | little street a good one. The house, which~stands second from
50 I,VI | be prepaid./~ ~"N.B. The house of A. Popinot supplies all
51 I,VII| workmen on a Sunday in the house of a man so religious as~
52 I,VII| clerk, as they left the house, "give up~all thoughts of
53 I,VII| shop-door and re-entered the house from the street. The entrance
54 I,VII| I am the owner of~this house."~ ~Molineux was so ready
55 I,I | speculation, his share in the~house of A. Popinot and Company,
56 I,I | expect to hold a single house upon them; he was~speculating
57 I,I | arrest, she took refuge in a house in the Palais-~Royal, where
58 I,I | interest, who~have dined at my house,--take me somewhere in a
59 I,I | not guaranteed,'~by the house of Claparon. Those words
60 I,I | Nevertheless, as he reached the house he felt that inward faintness~
61 I,II | meet the payments on his house and on his~loans, and to
62 I,II | Roses" to westward,~the house of A. Popinot was rising,
63 I,II | the frontiers, made the house of A. Popinot and Company
64 I,II | went to Francois Keller's house in Rue du~Houssaye, having
65 I,II | him as he~approached the house of the Liberal banker, who
66 I,II | that of the head of the house, feeling himself astride
67 I,II | reached with this perfidious house. Often the~gracious "yes"
68 I,II | intimate~adviser of the house of Keller, who retired on
69 I,III| business relations with your house. You can confidently do~
70 I,III| inspecting the affairs of the house,--of~holding, as she phrased
71 I,III| aged already.~ ~*****~ ~The house of A. Popinot, Rue des Cinq-Diamants,
72 I,III| floor of a dignified old~house, in an appartement decorated
73 I,IV | this prime minister~of the house of Nucingen wrote Birotteau
74 I,IV | splendors of that noted house.~ ~"And yet he has failed
75 I,IV | His ledder gif you in my house a creydit vich is only limided
76 I,IV | take your notes which the~house of Claparon passed over
77 I,IV | as~though he came from a house of financial ill-fame. He
78 I,V | purpose the credit of the house of Popinot. Do~you know
79 I,V | assets? Your share in the house of Popinot is all that saves
80 I,V | whom~the management of the house had been left during this
81 I,V | thousand~for your share in the house of Popinot. Thus you can
82 I,V | on the third floor of a house whose window-sashes, with~
83 I,V | on a third floor of this~house, from which no consideration
84 I,V | morning Constance went~to the house of the Duc de Lenoncourt,
85 I,V | felt that his~was the only house where Cesar's wife could
86 I,V | plainly dressed, left the house on foot and went to their~
87 I,V | poor child I lost. From my house it is~but a step to your
88 I,VI | of some large commercial house. The /sine qua non/~condition
89 I,VI | hermetically tight, of a house~where pillage has left a
90 I,VI | politics, and the owner of the house in which~Pillerault lived;
91 I,VI | Birotteau's interests in the house of~Popinot, from which it
92 I,VI | interests of~the perfumer in the house of Popinot and Company were
93 I,VI | assignee, had found in Cesar's house everything~the poor man
94 I,VI | talent. The masters of the house were obliged to check her
95 I,VII| gaiety. When they reached the house where Pillerault, the~Ragons,
96 I,VII| together, re-entered the house,~even Cesar, little observing
97 I,VII| variations, at Lourdois~the house painter's, father-in-law
98 I,VII| the head of the important~house where Cesarine was employed,
99 I,VII| since his fall he saw the house where eighteen years of
100 I,VII| and they had come to the house to make arrangements for
101 I,VII| Birotteau looking at his old house," said Monsieur~Molineux
102 I,VII| old home. He~entered the house, and saw at the foot of
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