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Alphabetical    [«  »]
commemorate 7
comment 1
commerce 60
commercial 97
commercially 4
commission 11
commissioned 1
Frequency    [«  »]
101 years
100 nothing
99 anselme
97 commercial
97 just
95 don
94 rue
Honoré de Balzac
Rise and Fall of Cesar Birotteau

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commercial

   Part, Chapter
1 I,II | shall show that~fortuitous commercial events which strong brains 2 I,II | without repugnance. His commercial interests~showed him the 3 I,II | and simple independence in~commercial uncertainties? he asked 4 I,II | cards, and a thousand other commercial seductions, such as~fixed 5 I,II | shop-~front has now become a commercial poem. The low price of all 6 I,II | feeling, and agitated only by commercial anxieties.~ ~During the 7 I,II | been elected judge in the commercial courts: his integrity, his 8 I,II | law-reports and books treating of commercial litigation. His~sense of 9 I,II | a Figaro, he was first a commercial~traveller, then a perfumer' 10 I,II | a~fashion, according to commercial jurisprudence, which belonged 11 I,II | customer~enters; but this commercial sunshine was really the 12 I,II | His great experience in~commercial matters had given him a 13 I,II | who in the course of his commercial life had seen such loss 14 I,II | institutions, commerce, and commercial enterprises, all of~which, 15 I,II | which so many royal and~commercial houses offer signal examples. 16 I,III| as Werbrust and Gigonnet, commercial money-lenders in the~Rues 17 I,III| gentlemen would use in their~commercial loans certain moneys he 18 I,III| living lay-figures called in commercial language a~"man of straw." 19 I,III| created a man. Out of a former commercial traveller, who was without~ 20 I,III| you as the one to found a~commercial house in the high-class 21 I,IV | Cesar, displaying his finest commercial graces. "If punctuality,~ 22 I,IV | thought Cesar, with a flash of commercial prudence. The~suspicion 23 I,IV | a dry tone, "an esteemed commercial judge, a~deputy-mayor, and 24 I,V | lost, in the course of his commercial~career, his wife and son, 25 I,V | vulgarized it; for the habits of commercial life~lowered the stern and 26 I,V | Birotteau, alive to the commercial loss.~"If this is so why 27 I,V | After all, we are both commercial men."~ ~"Pretty nearly, 28 I,V | for it; I have been your~commercial traveller, that is all. 29 I,V | usages and customs of former commercial days, which placed an enormous~ 30 I,VI | upon a young man whom his commercial~/second-sight/ pointed out 31 I,VI | to the~cleverest of all commercial travellers, to him whose 32 I,VI | famous by the power of his commercial magnetism. In those days~ 33 I,VI | fact he became, the king of commercial travellers, the~/Frenchman 34 I,VI | sure of Gaudissart. The~commercial traveller, so knowing in 35 I,VI | if you like," said the commercial traveller, brandishing his~ 36 I,VI | Three days later the commercial circles of the quarter were 37 I,VI | which we write, the~late commercial traveller possessed not 38 I,VI | with feeble light upon the commercial~horizon. Anselme Popinot 39 I,VI | journeyman~whose services the commercial traveller had invoked, were 40 I,VI | uneasiness. People who are~purely commercial look upon an author with 41 I,VI | the judge, recognizing the commercial~traveller; "and what are 42 I,VII| punctual. The dinner, like all commercial dinners, was~extremely gay, 43 I,VII| feminine aristocracy to the commercial figures about them.~ ~There 44 I,VII| glance from the promoted commercial traveller which warned him 45 I,VII| the last notes of their commercial~symphony.~ ~Weary, but happy, 46 I,I | merchant is never safe from commercial reverses until he has~retired 47 I,I | happened~throughout his whole commercial life. Like all persons who 48 I,I | request, to a judge of the~commercial courts. The conference between 49 I,I | and recited clauses of the commercial Code in a solemn~voice.~ ~"' 50 I,I | find myself in so severe a commercial crisis~that I must ask you 51 I,I | Monsieur~Lebas, a judge of the commercial courts, and my friend--"~ ~" 52 I,I | opportunity, Monsieur Lebas of the commercial courts; there~are so many 53 I,I | I hold inflexibly to one commercial rule: I never give my guarantee~ 54 I,I | think highly of the~late commercial traveller's capacity. Du 55 I,II | uncertainty. In such horrible commercial straits~a man, unless his 56 I,II | Derville,~smiling.~ ~"In the commercial courts--" began Birotteau.~ ~" 57 I,II | lawyer, "the judges of the commercial courts and the~judges of 58 I,II | sanguinary colors of the commercial~Bellona, and reach a state 59 I,II | into the narrow path of commercial~fears and precautions speedily 60 I,II | than ever before, the whole commercial~universe. Birotteau had 61 I,II | letters of credit, and commercial circulars. Keller sat~down 62 I,II | will be brief. I come on~commercial business only,--to ask if 63 I,II | formerly a judge of the commercial courts, and known to the 64 I,IV | ill omen on the smallest commercial mishap, now giving him the~ 65 I,IV | How is it that you, an old commercial judge, should commit such~ 66 I,IV | the renewal of notes is in commercial~jurisprudence what the correctional 67 I,IV | champagne."~ ~To make an old commercial traveller drunk is an impossibility. 68 I,IV | who told you to go to that commercial guillotine?"~ ~"Monsieur 69 I,IV | away, seeing that the late commercial~traveller was about to relate 70 I,IV | anxiety to her husband's commercial reputation: she waited silently~ 71 I,V | back,--a~judge!~ ~"From a commercial point of view," he said, " 72 I,V | have overcome this little commercial~difficulty, keep the sum 73 I,V | the mercy~of the smallest commercial mischance; but Cephalic 74 I,V | general comment in the upper commercial circles, which~at that period 75 I,V | Cesarine in some respectable commercial establishment. Lebas made~ 76 I,VI | there is not in all Paris a commercial~passion able to keep itself 77 I,VI | general rule.~ ~This fine commercial drama is in three distinct 78 I,VI | know, that a judge of the commercial courts is~the most extraordinary 79 I,VI | at the head of some large commercial house. The /sine qua non/~ 80 I,VI | judgment on the avalanche of commercial suits incessantly rolling~ 81 I,VI | managing his own affairs. This commercial tribunal, far from being~ 82 I,VI | without remedy. The thirty commercial courts which~up to the present 83 I,VI | trusted.~ ~This alarming commercial tangle is so well understood 84 I,VI | meant to compass Cesar's commercial death. The names of the~ 85 I,VI | Du Tillet flung the noble commercial carcass to the little~jackal, 86 I,VI | he bought a copy of the commercial Code. Happily, Joseph Lebas,~ 87 I,VI | he had got hold of~an old commercial sphinx.~ ~"Monsieur," he 88 I,VI | was~his tutelary angel.~ ~Commercial law imposes a horrible torture 89 I,VI | enter as a bankrupt the commercial tribunal of~justice where 90 I,VI | obedience to the law struck the~commercial mind keenly. Birotteau's 91 I,VI | this failure to be a rare commercial wonder, seldom seen in the~ 92 I,VI | them. The solicitors of the commercial courts are~few in number; 93 I,VI | and displaying an innate commercial~talent. The masters of the 94 I,VII| declared a bankrupt by the commercial~tribunal of the Seine. His 95 I,VII| corner,~looked at the man of commercial honor very much as a naturalist 96 I,VII| caused him, the hero of commercial honor was now to meet~the 97 I,VII| heaven to behold a martyr of commercial honor worthy to receive


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