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yonder 1
you 1052
you- 7
young 90
youngest 1
your 379
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92 people
91 might
91 ragon
90 young
89 cried
89 men
89 whose
Honoré de Balzac
Rise and Fall of Cesar Birotteau

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young

   Part, Chapter
1 I,I | contractors. Monsieur Grindot, the~young architect who is to alter 2 I,II | happily abandoned Cesar for a~young recruit belonging to her 3 I,II | together. Dressed like other young men of an epoch when~fashion 4 I,II | fired the imagination of the young man. The horrible fate of 5 I,II | meeting with a beautiful~young woman, of whom a libertine 6 I,II | Ile Saint-Louis, he saw a young girl standing~at the door 7 I,II | fashion and commerce. The young~forewoman was at this time 8 I,II | who flattened more noses,~young and old, against the window-panes 9 I,II | humor~for "shopping." The young person deigned to take notice 10 I,II | name and address to the~young lady, who grew very indifferent 11 I,II | de la Ferraille, whom the young man had finally discovered 12 I,II | sanctioning the wishes of the young Tourangian. In the year 13 I,II | topic among the~fashionable young men of the Empire. If Cesar 14 I,II | truly was she an~ingenuous young girl.~ ~When he first came 15 I,II | had taken as head-clerk a young man~twenty-two years of 16 I,II | he considered good. This young Norman, gifted with~dangerous 17 I,II | Ferdinand was~a tall, slender young man, with a good figure 18 I,II | Monsieur Ragon named Popinot, a~young man nineteen years old, 19 I,II | man might~drive one still young, and possibly repentant, 20 I,III| silent, agitated, as any~young lad might well have been 21 I,III| countenance. He had once been young and daring;~beginning as 22 I,III| money-lender (that providence of young men of family) to find~out 23 I,III| happened to want a clever young man to examine into an affair 24 I,III| That's the way with ardent young people.~Listen till I've 25 I,III| his benefit as an educated young man.~ ~"Anselme, I have 26 I,III| selling them raw.~Ambitious young man, are you satisfied?"~ ~ 27 I,III| color of a warming-pan. Young girls are queer; still, 28 I,IV | perfumer, catching sight of the young man, with whom he had~made 29 I,IV | the State. In Italy the young man had~dreamed of art; 30 I,IV | call him a trimmer. The~young architect in question had 31 I,IV | explained~everything, the young man proceeded to sum up 32 I,IV | farthing,"~answered the young man; "but as I don't know 33 I,IV | cheaply."~ ~"With such ideas, young man," said Birotteau in 34 I,IV | Monsieur /de/ Grindot, a young man~distinguished in his 35 I,IV | morning-gown, fresh and rosy as a young girl is fresh~and rosy at 36 I,IV | Cesarine~seemed to the young artist a picture of the 37 I,IV | for, after the fashion of young shop-women, whose~desire 38 I,IV | toilet. The beauty of this young girl was not the beauty 39 I,IV | clear with the serenity of a young girl who knows no care. 40 I,IV | vague physical languor of a young girl who has~never left 41 I,IV | of dress from the elegant young women who~came to the shop, 42 I,IV | turned the heads of all the young men,~especially the clerks, 43 I,IV | and dared not question~the young man on the effects of his 44 I,IV | noticing~the tit-for-tat of the young man, "consider economy, 45 I,V | him. So when he~lost the young man, two hundred friends 46 I,V | No, monsieur, but a young man whom I love, and who 47 I,V | before you, monsieur, a young man~who will count this 48 I,V | echo in the mind of the young girl, who, despite her~innocence, 49 I,VI | Deux-Ecus to seize upon a young man whom his commercial~/ 50 I,VI | three-sixes. Old Finot~manages young Finot by famine. Andoche, 51 I,VI | you will soon know that, young man," he said~to Grindot; " 52 I,VI | with the gestures which young people of the~present day 53 I,VI | will die of it. But when a young man has~something in his 54 I,VI | Ragon's cap skipped like young rams.~Claparon perceived 55 I,VI | goodness; interest her, young man, in the warmth~of these 56 I,VI | ancients. We can deal with young and old alike. We can say 57 I,VI | and we can say to the young man, 'My dear boy, here' 58 I,VI | drink to the success of my young friend, here present!"~ ~" 59 I,VI | the public."~ ~The three young fellows devoured their dinner 60 I,VI | Monsieur Andoche~Finot, a young man distinguished in literature, 61 I,VI | friend Popinot is a~virtuous young man; he is going with his 62 I,VII| noticed the pleasure of the~young girl when she saw Anselme 63 I,VII| GRAND-JACQUES,--and the~YOUNG SCAMP, who was the Marquis 64 I,VII| Monsieur Gaudissart,~two young men who are very useful 65 I,VII| the little trifles that young girls like, completed~the 66 I,VII| the recipe for remaining young and beautiful."~ ~"You are, 67 I,VII| remarked that impertinent young woman to the perfumer. " 68 I,VII| which excites laughter; the young women grow~volatile, and 69 I,I | the uneasiness which the~young merchant inspired in his 70 I,I | discovered," exclaimed the young notary. "Madame Roguin is 71 I,I | Xandrot, go with me!"~ ~The young notary compassionately put 72 I,I | Constance braced his nerves. The young notary had the charity to 73 I,III| call that a~feather in a young man's cap? I understand 74 I,III| I had nothing, you know. Young men are sometimes in~positions 75 I,III| sweet converse which the young people, thrilling with~love, 76 I,III| from table, "I think those young~people love each other."~ ~" 77 I,III| the card-table, and~by the young people in those little games 78 I,IV | for, at this moment, a young man entered the room familiarly, 79 I,IV | left the baronne and the young man, and~where Delphine 80 I,V | benefactor! I am like a young sailor who ought to~sink 81 I,V | merchant, taking the arm of the young~man.~ ~It was half-past 82 I,V | old~soldier, the other a young recruit, who had never known, 83 I,V | shall be like you in your young~days; and you shall never 84 I,V | was not unknown to this young man, who had been to~her 85 I,VI | business with the devotion of a young girl. She sat~up at night, 86 I,VII| road twenty years before, young,~prosperous, full of hope, 87 I,VII| more beautiful than the~young girl I followed along this 88 I,VII| that the chaste and pure young girl inclined her head to 89 I,VII| little red-head. He's a nice young fellow; he lets me~earn 90 I,VII| threshold of his happiness. The young man~was prodigiously surprised


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