Part, Chapter
1 I,I | sanctum for you. I make~the shop out of the back-shop, the
2 I,I | Saint-Honore--fy! bad style! Our shop~must be as comfortable as
3 I,I | had~two sous worth in the shop you thought the customers
4 I,I | the Carminative Balm. Our shop has given us a living, but
5 I,II | errands, and sweep up the shop~and the pavement, made fun
6 I,II | made a clean sweep in the shop~of citizen Ragon, Cesar
7 I,II | nightly conversations when the~shop was closed, the street quiet,
8 I,II | standing~at the door of a shop at the angle of the Quai
9 I,II | Petit-~Matelot gave the shop an unheard of vogue, and
10 I,II | rushed furiously into the shop to buy six linen shirts,~
11 I,II | little revolving world of the shop. Some days later he~again
12 I,II | and his sojourn in a dark shop had dulled the brightness
13 I,II | the~/entresol/ above the shop,--a sort of den tolerably
14 I,II | manufactories, and decorated his shop at~"The Queen of Roses"
15 I,II | hitherto~occupied only the shop and the /entresol/, and
16 I,II | Birotteau took him into the shop on a~pretext of business.~ ~"
17 I,II | who had seen him in the shop in the days when "The Queen
18 I,III| quickly, and went down~to the shop, just as the boy was taking
19 I,III| begin to-day to look for a shop, so as to~start at once?"~ ~"
20 I,IV | as he entered the man's~shop, "my wife consents to the
21 I,IV | will not enter~through the shop," he added, opening the
22 I,IV | atmosphere of a Parisian shop, where the air stagnates
23 I,IV | young women who~came to the shop, and had learned from them
24 I,V | pipe~before the door of his shop looking at the passers-by,
25 I,V | the joy of having found a shop, a back-shop, kitchen,~chambers
26 I,V | work, took charge of the shop; but the clerks~came down
27 I,V | when his comrades~in the shop said, "Mademoiselle Cesarine
28 I,V | went back to~them, "the shop will be closed at ten o'
29 I,V | ideas, or~else to hire the shop."~ ~"We all know the cause
30 I,V | when he~came down into the shop after dinner.~ ~"What's
31 I,VI | naturally went to look at~the shop in the Rue des Cinq-Diamants,
32 I,VI | Yes, but he still keeps a shop," said Constance, in the
33 I,VI | ladies at the door of his shop. Powder, well~raked off,
34 I,VI | put Raguet on guard in the shop. We can't go through our
35 I,VI | tell Raguet to close the shop as~to pour out his excuses
36 I,VI | Imagine a large and spacious shop, with~great iron-bound doors,
37 I,VI | guard-room. Next to the shop came the back-shop,~and
38 I,VI | obfuscating effect~of a shop and a counting-room, had
39 I,VII| time as the lease~of the shop in the Rue des Cinq-Diamants,--
40 I,VII| who makes me leave the shop and speak to her at the~
41 I,VII| counter of~a bookseller's shop, and obtained in return,
42 I,VII| of the second~floor, the shop will be closed; all we shall
43 I,I | from the windows of his shop, thinking over the~expansion
44 I,I | about law, lingered in the~shop; and as the attention of
45 I,I | you."~ ~Grindot left the shop, and Molineux followed him
46 I,I | drawing him to the back~of the shop, "my account has been examined,
47 I,I | bound his brow,--"stop at my shop; go in and speak to Celestin~
48 I,II | vat.~When he entered his shop, the clerk who had carried
49 I,II | dining-room, or a work-room to a~shop. Here were turned inside
50 I,III| When he got back to the shop, he saw, not without a shudder,
51 I,III| change in two months. The shop was repainted. The shelves,~
52 I,III| into the rooms above the shop and the back-shop. An old
53 I,III| penned up in a corner of the shop closed in with glass, might
54 I,III| There~was no fire in the shop, and the door was always
55 I,IV | returned to his gloomy~shop with an anxious brow. Birotteau
56 I,V | undertake. Don't leave your shop to-morrow, and take the~
57 I,V | willing to go into some shop, and I shall never~think
58 I,V | man, who had been to~her shop two or three times in search
59 I,V | superintendence of the new shop was entrusted to her; she
60 I,VI | if he sells wood; in his shop, if, like Birotteau, he
61 I,VI | Queen of Roses'! Why, the shop~alone cost ten thousand;
62 I,VI | worth of property in the shop. Why! the Paste and the
63 I,VI | dark /entresol/ above the shop, whose~single window was
64 I,VII| a movement to~leave the shop.~ ~"I have fifteen years'
65 I,VII| going to the~back of the shop, where du Tillet followed
66 I,VII| last. She can leave~that shop where she is killing herself--"~ ~"
67 I,VII| circuit to avoid~seeing his shop and the windows of his former
68 I,VII| Molineux to the owner of a shop opposite to "The Queen of
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