Part, Chapter
1 I,I | the~business, and let us go and live in your native
2 I,I | were all thieves.~I had to go down on my knees to you
3 I,I | pretty as you are, you can go and bury~yourself at Chinon?
4 I,I | guided by law?"~ ~"Let me go on. Roguin is in it, and
5 I,I | Honor before fortune.~Come, go to bed, dear friend, there
6 I,I | help me once more. I shall go to him~to-morrow and submit
7 I,II | whose information did not go beyond their~specialty,
8 I,II | speak of it. We will~not go to bed till we have found
9 I,III| Celestin;~you and I will go and have a talk in the Tuileries,"
10 I,III| in case he were forced~to go into bankruptcy through
11 I,III| workshop, you~and I. Before you go to the Rue des Lombards,
12 I,III| morning.~To-night we will go, about dinner-time, to the
13 I,III| out cleverly. Before you go to~Livingston's, just stop
14 I,III| possession~of my secret; we will go shares, and there's no need
15 I,IV | premises. If you~like, we will go and see Monsieur Molineux
16 I,IV | madame does not wish you to go out--"~ ~"Pshaw!" said Birotteau, "
17 I,IV | stomach. Do me the kindness to go~forward; we will meet at
18 I,IV | unless you are~willing to go up and explain matters to
19 I,IV | when the weather is fine,~go to see the skating, and
20 I,IV | ingratitude tenants can go, and to what~precautions
21 I,V | fashion just now.~Well, go on; settle the business;
22 I,V | Vauquelin's. We can talk as we go."~ ~Cesar and Popinot got
23 I,V | the public is; you can't go and tell it--"~ ~"That it
24 I,V | our~fortune is made. We'll go to the manufactory to-morrow
25 I,V | hydraulic press is ready to go to work, the land affair
26 I,VI | at your wedding! I shall go to~Italy, Germany, England!
27 I,VI | and its decoration were to go beyond due~limits, it would
28 I,VI | guard in the shop. We can't go through our own~door; everything
29 I,VI | stupid. If you talk politics,~go for the government, but
30 I,VI | risky, unsettled. Now, don't go beyond that, and~mind you
31 I,VI | very hungry."~ ~"Let us go to dinner," said Birotteau.~ ~"
32 I,VI | home to the bank, and we go to him with proposals,~canals,
33 I,VI | reading and ciphering."~ ~"To go back to the ministers,"
34 I,VI | science. We shirk nothing; we go straight to the point. That'
35 I,VI | his uncle; let's you and I go and~finish the evening with
36 I,VII| bent on getting everybody.~"Go on, Cesarine. Monsieur le
37 I,VII| perhaps more dreadful to go before the lesser~courts
38 I,I | misfortune, he prepared to go out.~ ~"Good morning, monsieur,"
39 I,I | request, but I don't wish to go to the usurers.~I have not
40 I,I | walk."~ ~"My God! I cannot go home as I am," said Birotteau. "
41 I,I | my~wife's sake. Xandrot, go with me!"~ ~The young notary
42 I,I | brow,--"stop at my shop; go in and speak to Celestin~
43 I,I | notary had the charity to go~before, and warn Madame
44 I,I | daughter entreated Cesar to go to bed, and they sent for~
45 I,I | bankruptcy; they are sure to go before the criminal courts,
46 I,I | matter not to let judgment go by default against the men
47 I,II | opponents will let the~case go by default. We can't always
48 I,II | round to us."~ ~"We will go together to the Chamber,"
49 I,II | and breathed again.~ ~"Go on; I hear you," said Keller
50 I,II | the examination of others. Go and see my brother~Adolphe,
51 I,II | hope to see you before you go the Chamber," she said.~ ~"
52 I,III| gone."~ ~"Birotteau, don't go out; I want to speak to
53 I,III| are all upset; you don't go to the~manufactory any more;
54 I,III| I--"~ ~"Now, there you go!" cried Cesar; "you will
55 I,III| said Cesarine.~ ~"I'll go and see him," cried Cesar,
56 I,III| No, for we don't always go to bed," said Popinot. "
57 I,III| Cesar, leaving Popinot~to go on with his business, for
58 I,III| Constance as they drove home, "go and see Monsieur le~Baron
59 I,III| said Constance.~ ~"All will go well, papa; Monsieur Anselme
60 I,IV | upon as his only friend.~ ~"Go on with your dressing,"
61 I,IV | with the spur exclaiming, "Go on! go on! I am~listening
62 I,IV | spur exclaiming, "Go on! go on! I am~listening to you."~ ~
63 I,IV | your notes," she said; "go and see Monsieur Claparon,~
64 I,IV | It will be time enough to go to the~money-lenders with
65 I,IV | thought came into~her mind to go and see Anselme; but her
66 I,IV | worried, old fellow,~all will go well. Pay up to the 15th,
67 I,IV | combination of capacities.~Go in with us; don't potter
68 I,IV | traders: 'My friends, let us go to work:~write a prospectus!
69 I,IV | all is, my~good sir. Come, go into the business with us.
70 I,IV | hat-box, your socks (don't you go in~for ribbed socks?), your
71 I,IV | virtuous folly,~who told you to go to that commercial guillotine?"~ ~"
72 I,IV | paper! You seem to have some go~in you. Let's do business
73 I,IV | he won't be allowed to go far.~Gobseck sits in a corner
74 I,IV | Popinot the elder chanced to go and see his nephew. This~
75 I,IV | uncle and begged him to go at once to the Morgue. During
76 I,IV | The women left the room to go and weep by~themselves in
77 I,V | Popinot, here am I; we will go to work as soon as the clerks~
78 I,V | rigid as a statue.~ ~"Let us go below," said the old merchant,
79 I,V | Vandenesse. Write to them, go and see them; they might
80 I,V | Pillerault left~them to go to the Bourse, which in
81 I,V | happens always to those who go out of their~proper business,"
82 I,V | wouldn't have failed. He will go~on now under the name of
83 I,V | deceives us. Stop! I'll go and make him pay me; I will--"~ ~"
84 I,V | you to the galleys; I'll go to the police,--justice
85 I,V | Pillerault was persuading~to go with him, while Cesar, to
86 I,V | expressing~his willingness to go to prison,--"madame, for
87 I,V | madame; but I may as well go and drown myself, for Gigonnet
88 I,V | am ready and willing to go into some shop, and I shall
89 I,V | placed Cesar, begging him to go with her to the duke and~
90 I,VI | judges, sue for justice, go and come, and stir up~sympathy;
91 I,VI | Birotteau. He was~compelled to go to the Cour Batave, to mount
92 I,VI | nephew,--~ ~"Cesar, you can go to your meeting to-day without
93 I,VII| of his great disaster.~ ~"Go and take a walk in the Aulnay
94 I,VII| into that of Constance; "go with Anselme and Cesarine!~
95 I,VII| time and~patience we can go far."~ ~Birotteau's joy
96 I,VII| more, Anselme, or I shall go out of my mind."~ ~The angelic
97 I,VII| answered: "I shall never go back to business, monsieur.
98 I,VII| during the night Cesar would go~over the question in his
99 I,VII| Very good; then let us go at once to Crottat and settle
100 I,VII| three o'clock. I wish to go to the Bourse, and use my~
101 I,VII| Cesar got into the coach to go to his own home, where the~
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