Part, Chapter
1 I,I | When~Cesar turned about to say to his wife, "Well, what
2 I,I | are~our enemies. They all say, 'Birotteau has had luck;
3 I,I | sweat of our brow: I can say~ours, for I've sat behind
4 I,I | all."~ ~"I expected you to say all this, wife," said Cesar
5 I,I | notary of Paris, as you say. Well, then, a hundred thousand~
6 I,I | this business, you would say to me: 'Look here,~Cesar,
7 I,I | Is that reasonable? You say, 'He is acting against the~
8 I,I | were~necessary. Can't they say the same of me? Would Ragon
9 I,I | and Pillerault~come and say to me: 'Why do you have
10 I,I | Cesar, all is said; let us say no more. Honor before fortune.~
11 I,I | husband. "Just listen; I say good-day because~it is morning,
12 I,II | smile with a jovial air, and say,--~ ~"Ah, my boy! all is
13 I,II | maintains that people should say /ormoires/, because~women
14 I,II | corruption of the~language to say /armoires/. Potier, Talma,
15 I,II | that it is necessary to say a few words about him. In
16 I,II | reserved,~and accustomed to say only what he meant to say,
17 I,II | say only what he meant to say, du Tillet unbosomed~his
18 I,II | will pay~you," Ragon would say. "If he is without means
19 I,III| will succeed," Cesar would say to Madame~Ragon, as he praised
20 I,III| if you will allow me to say so, you have got a head
21 I,III| that's not it. I don't say that my head-piece isn't~
22 I,III| thousand francs of~her own, to say nothing of expectations,
23 I,III| vagabond~life, led him to say /amen/ to everything. Having
24 I,IV | peddlers."~ ~"Well, I won't say that I will take all; but
25 I,IV | artists. I permit myself to say to you~that architecture
26 I,IV | King of Prussia, that is to say for ourselves. I will now
27 I,IV | content, for all response, to say, "Read what the papers say,"--
28 I,IV | say, "Read what the papers say,"--the~bourgeois, essentially
29 I,IV | if you want it," he would say to a man he~thought solvent, "
30 I,IV | But my motive is, I may say, something~different. I
31 I,IV | placards. And yet people say there is no~poetry in commerce!
32 I,V | my uncle, how simply you say things! You touch my heart."~ ~"
33 I,V | daughter.~ ~"Papa, you must say beautiful, or people will
34 I,V | spite of all the moderns may~say; I stand by Boileau about
35 I,V | mixed up in what I~have to say!" cried Cesar, naively. "
36 I,V | Oh! in the next they say we shall be all alike, kings
37 I,V | within it, or, as we should~say in chemistry, in liquefaction.
38 I,V | divine--"~ ~"Divine! oh, don't say that, Monsieur Vauquelin."~ ~"
39 I,V | light--"~ ~"No power, as I say, can make the hair grow
40 I,V | beneath your~eyes. You must say when you look at the Virgin, '
41 I,V | all very well for him to say that any oil is good; if
42 I,V | with an eye which seemed to say, "What~is that to me?"~ ~"
43 I,V | should never tell what we say to each other!" cried Constance.~"
44 I,V | We shall have, as they say, to~put the little pots
45 I,VI | will~succeed.' To-day I--I say to you, 'You will succeed.'
46 I,VI | year,--eighteen francs; say eighteen~thousand heads,--
47 I,VI | honor--"~ ~"What do you say?" said Lourdois, "have they
48 I,VI | seem like a banker you must say nothing,~or, at any rate,
49 I,VI | young and old alike. We can say to~the old man, 'Ha, monsieur!
50 I,VI | us believe';~and we can say to the young man, 'My dear
51 I,VI | government newspapers,--I may~say a statesman on the high-road
52 I,VII| beautiful."~ ~"You are, as I may say, partly at home here, Monsieur
53 I,I | I am an accomplice if I say a word about that~hundred
54 I,I | to me, and beg her not to say a word to her~mother. We
55 I,I | I shall struggle on; but say not a word to any one,--~
56 I,I | Give me your~attention. Say that we are engaged in a
57 I,I | only carried off, as they say, three hundred thousand~
58 I,I | share of Roguin's assets, say perhaps one hundred thousand~
59 I,II | after closing~what he had to say with an entreaty that Pillerault
60 I,II | rate; beg the Ragons to say nothing, and not to take~
61 I,II | you are crying," she would say, crying herself.~ ~Birotteau
62 I,II | six months~hence he could say to his uncle and aunt, "
63 I,II | and he~therefore could say nothing indiscreet to Madame
64 I,II | his mind what he~ought to say, or ought not to say, to
65 I,II | to say, or ought not to say, to a leading man in banking~
66 I,II | face the great orator, and say~to him, "I am Birotteau!"
67 I,III| neither~give him a credit nor say anything in his favor to
68 I,III| Birotteau,~exasperated, tried to say something about the cupidity
69 I,III| and by which, if we may say so, the capital of the existence
70 I,IV | Nucingen should receif, as she say, zom lessons from~Matame
71 I,IV | I haf~heard dat der king say dat your ball--"~ ~"The
72 I,IV | first room. They are to say I'm cogitating a~great enterprise--
73 I,IV | after that we will see--I~say, we will see. Another glass
74 I,IV | birth to such as he. But, I~say, you are a funny fellow,
75 I,IV | Bourse. If he is, as~they say, the tool of old Gobseck,
76 I,V | They have gone so far as to say you had no property in~Roguin'
77 I,V | the letter."~ ~"They will say that it is a fraud."~ ~"
78 I,V | said to Pillerault.~ ~"They say so," replied the other. "
79 I,V | are obliged to do so, they say that you have kept back
80 I,VI | out of the fire, as they say. You are keen; you are acting
81 I,VI | in the Hall." He did not say the word "Bankruptcy." "
82 I,VII| look and accent~seemed to say to Cesar, "We are paid."~ ~
83 I,VII| sixty~thousand francs, or say no more about it," said
84 I,VII| is no longer, we will not say religion, but~belief among
85 I,VII| his honor.~We desire to say publicly that this failure
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