Part, Chapter
1 I,I | her eyes upon the bed and saw her husband's night-cap,
2 I,I | Madame Birotteau suddenly saw a strong light in the~room
3 I,I | especially when she thought she saw traces of a struggle~in
4 I,I | full of anguish.~ ~She then saw the perfumer in the middle
5 I,I | ordering furniture for me; I saw Braschon here, and it was~
6 I,II | and wondered at all he saw. After a week's stay he
7 I,II | royalty. When Monsieur Ragon saw that Cesar was well-~disposed
8 I,II | the Ile Saint-Louis, he saw a young girl standing~at
9 I,II | bought the book, in~which he saw his fortune. Nevertheless,
10 I,II | plodding on through life, saw the dawn of an era of~prosperity
11 I,II | of resolution.~The public saw results only. Excepting
12 I,III| Tuileries," he said, when he~saw Anselme come down.~ ~Popinot,
13 I,III| hastened to lay aside~when he saw Birotteau, grew out of certain
14 I,III| the first Sunday when he saw, at Birotteau's house, the~
15 I,III| discovery, du Tillet at once~saw the reason of Gobseck's
16 I,III| Having sold his honor, he~saw it risked with so much caution
17 I,III| asked the clerk, when he saw his~master's pale face.~ ~"
18 I,IV | Grindot was measuring. She saw in those~mysterious weavings
19 I,IV | left the notary's house, he saw du Tillet at the window~
20 I,IV | mind. He looked again and~saw Madame Roguin, and the presence
21 I,IV | there were no cracks, and he saw no broken~tiles until a
22 I,V | Popinot?" asked Cesar, as he saw Anselme~blush.~ ~"Monsieur,
23 I,V | has ever dreamed of it. I saw~an engraving of Hero and
24 I,V | be increased. Bless me! I saw,~down in the Cour Batave,
25 I,VI | possession of Popinot's secret, saw~its importance.~ ~"Come
26 I,VI | hair was~madly growing, and saw two angels who unfolded,
27 I,VI | Rue Aubry-le-Boucher, I saw in a wholesale glass~place,
28 I,VI | muttered Cesar.~ ~"I went in; I saw thousands of these bottles
29 I,VI | of his pockets. Popinot saw the~gesture, and slipped
30 I,VII| the~young girl when she saw Anselme enter, and he made
31 I,I | all reckoning. Birotteau saw his coffers~empty, and terror
32 I,I | his own standing; but he saw a cloud upon~Lourdois' brow,
33 I,I | dilated so enormously that he saw only red~flames.~ ~"Your
34 I,I | Pillerault,--and my wife, who~saw true--"~ ~A rain of confused
35 I,II | lives from day to day, he saw only the present moment.~
36 I,II | three times a month!~Finot saw three thousand francs for
37 I,II | two long~hours Birotteau saw the banker three times,
38 I,II | favorable to him! for he saw, through the~coarse varnish
39 I,III| bathed in tears, he scarcely~saw a fine English horse, covered
40 I,III| got back to the shop, he saw, not without a shudder,
41 I,IV | sank~within him when he saw the splendors of that noted
42 I,IV | Nucingen opened the door he saw the despairing~gesture of
43 I,IV | of /cafe a la creme/. He saw that~the coffee had been
44 I,IV | looked fixedly at him, and he saw the silver-lined pupils
45 I,IV | looked up at his wife he saw a soft smile~upon her lips;
46 I,IV | dressing-gown gaped open, he saw an undershirt of~knitted
47 I,IV | the~judge followed, and saw Birotteau hanging about
48 I,IV | des Lombards, and when he~saw the perfumer re-enter Anselme'
49 I,IV | anxious brow. Birotteau saw the change.~ ~"Will you
50 I,IV | ringing in his~ears, and saw the distorted face of the
51 I,V | by the tone of his~voice, saw him tear the papers and
52 I,V | and fatal stream of light, saw at length~the frightful
53 I,V | her voice to his when she saw him clasp his~hands and
54 I,V | her husband from distress, saw Popinot and Pillerault,~
55 I,V | heard the words.~Birotteau saw that his wife, Anselme,
56 I,V | hand to his wife, as he saw the courage with which she
57 I,VI | dishonorable failure; he saw an honorable~one. Caring
58 I,VI | through Cesar's heart when he saw Constance sitting~in a little
59 I,VI | his seventy years. Cesar saw~his wife passing down letters
60 I,VII| prudence, thou whose eyes saw clear, thou who art~irreproachable,
61 I,VII| midst of that fatal ball, I saw my~Constance, the only woman
62 I,VII| little observing as he was, saw a change in the manner of~
63 I,VII| heard it and came down, and saw du Tillet for the first
64 I,VII| imprudent to keep them. When I saw~du Tillet just now I was
65 I,VII| first time~since his fall he saw the house where eighteen
66 I,VII| to Joseph Lebas, for he saw symptoms in Cesar which
67 I,VII| him. The first person who saw them enter,~followed by
68 I,VII| He~entered the house, and saw at the foot of the staircase (
69 I,VII| in his~own home, when he saw his salon, his guests, the
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