Part, Chapter
1 I,I | beautiful white doe. Listen. People should~always do what their
2 I,I | porcelains. The workshop for our people, in the attic!~Passers-by
3 I,I | late."~ ~"Bah! all those people want your money."~ ~"But
4 I,I | your money."~ ~"But what people, my treasure? Is it your
5 I,I | Cesar, continuing; "the people~who sell, sell because they
6 I,I | a service to a good many people."~ ~"What did he wish to
7 I,II | these grounds the worthy people of the arrondissement made
8 I,II | they~captivated ignorant people by the distinctions they
9 I,II | the~ears of superficial people like eloquence. Thus he
10 I,II | perfumery. Mixing wholly with people to whom science and letters
11 I,II | them; who maintains that people should say /ormoires/, because~
12 I,II | moreover, all atheists, and people should be very careful not
13 I,II | Popinot the~judge, all the people of his own circle knew him
14 I,II | who well knew the worthy people among whom he had come~meaning
15 I,II | Madame Cesar in a way to make people suppose that his master
16 I,II | was received at once among people of the highest standing
17 I,II | fixed habits, which some people~called eccentricities. If
18 I,II | now to deal, but a whole people, or world, of sorrows.~ ~ ~
19 I,III| considerate, even if angry."~ ~Few people realize to-day how little
20 I,III| the way with ardent young people.~Listen till I've done."~ ~
21 I,III| benefited. As for us plain people, our~lack of mind keeps
22 I,III| by~this confidence, and people in love are capable of anything.~ ~"
23 I,IV | police; for he would not have people of certain~callings,--he
24 I,IV | of the placards. And yet people say there is no~poetry in
25 I,V | difficulties. Like all thoughtful~people he was a great observer;
26 I,V | a great observer; he let people talk, and then studied~them.
27 I,V | Abbe Loraux; for the good people of that circle knew each
28 I,V | make up the amount. Worthy people in~trouble,--it wrings my
29 I,V | other works of charity. People who have worked,~like me,
30 I,V | you must say beautiful, or people will laugh at you."~ ~"Upon
31 I,V | Virgin, 'There are some people~in the world who are thinking
32 I,V | brought up by virtuous people, by the Ragons, models of
33 I,VI | the gestures which young people of the~present day who have
34 I,VI | these virtuous and~worthy people; he therefore thought it
35 I,VI | Monsieur and Madame Ragon,~people of old-fashioned middle-class
36 I,VI | are going now among moral people,~virtuous people; and you
37 I,VI | among moral people,~virtuous people; and you are not to scare
38 I,VI | speech. But these worthy people ended by crediting~such
39 I,VI | failed, and he was now,~like people in the higher walks of finance,
40 I,VI | which much uneasiness. People who are~purely commercial
41 I,VI | from all the rival hair people; none of them give more~
42 I,VII| political pretensions: some people~even went so far as to deny
43 I,VII| there was a goodly number of~people whose invitations cost them
44 I,VII| heard strange stories of~people who came to bourgeois balls,
45 I,VII| with the upper-~crust people. Cesarine, write down Monsieur
46 I,VII| send a single invitation~to people whom you only know as customers.
47 I,VII| father-~in-law of Lebas--old people, but they'll sit in a corner;
48 I,VII| trying it on."~ ~"How many people have you got down," said
49 I,VII| simply and naturally by people who are stepping~from one
50 I,VII| best array, these worthy people paid~twenty-two visits in
51 I,VII| headquarters; a dinner for twenty people~was to be served at six
52 I,VII| calculated to please the worthy people~whom he was anxious to snare;
53 I,VII| appreciate me at last."~ ~People who are sufficiently large-minded
54 I,VII| smiled at the three delighted people, and shook his gray head.~ ~"
55 I,VII| secular arm of Chevet~and his people. No attire ever suited Madame
56 I,VII| beside himself.~ ~"These people crush us," said Madame Roguin
57 I,VII| fraud. In the eyes of some people, it~is better to be criminal
58 I,I | have seen so many failures! People are not exactly scoundrels
59 I,I | secure," said Lourdois; "people would think~twice before
60 I,I | clients,~then, were rich people, through whom he had never
61 I,II | thousand francs. Those worthy~people have, by my advice, sold
62 I,II | delightful joke which made~people so merry at the Funambules,
63 I,II | been a king among his own people, as~this man was a king
64 I,III| idiotic generosity, and helped~people of another way of thinking
65 I,III| as silent partners with people who are~involved in the
66 I,III| then some such detection. People do not hate each other for~
67 I,III| converse which the young people, thrilling with~love, held
68 I,III| table, "I think those young~people love each other."~ ~"Well,
69 I,III| card-table, and~by the young people in those little games called
70 I,IV | affably.~ ~"Madame, poor people, such as we are, seldom
71 I,IV | But he is nearer to the people; perhaps he will therefore
72 I,IV | myself! I don't receive people except on Saturdays. But
73 I,IV | He can receive the great people," said Claparon; "the small
74 I,V | thought thus of poor,~unhappy people who were doubtless as I
75 I,V | privilege of the~Left; the people belonged to it. The downfall
76 I,V | should try to throw dust~in people's eyes, I can understand;
77 I,V | condemning."~ ~"Don't trust people unless they live in hovels
78 I,V | heard of mayors robbing the people? If you don't pay~me I'll
79 I,V | smirch the~names of the people you rob."~ ~"Madame," said
80 I,V | Well, you are all honest people,~and I sha'n't lose my money,
81 I,V | ennobles even the plainest people; for it~has a grandeur of
82 I,V | was told of the interest~people in high places had taken
83 I,VI | it may happen, are clever people. This~personage, set up
84 I,VI | qui veut/. Light-minded people, devoid of conscience, to
85 I,VII| them,~these five choice people assumed an air and manner
86 I,VII| manifesting a joy at which people thinking~themselves superior
87 I,VII| don't really drudge, you people;~you've got good places.
88 I,VII| the hard~tone which some people take to importunate beggars.~ ~"
89 I,VII| Anselme Popinot."~ ~"Poor people!" said Madame Lourdois,
90 I,VII| mother-in-law~and son-in-law when people in that relation suit each
91 I,VII| religion, but~belief among the people, whenever early education
92 I,VII| between the law~and the people!"~ ~On this text followed
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