Part, Chapter
1 I,I | you want to increase your fortune, do as they did in~1793.
2 I,I | nephew, who can make his~fortune. The poor Ragonines look
3 I,I | others? Isn't our~present fortune enough for us? When you
4 I,I | his~commissions, and his fortune is made. I see him pass
5 I,I | after all.~You earned your fortune, didn't you? It is yours,
6 I,I | To-day you put all your fortune on~a game of cards. And
7 I,I | shall tremble till I see our fortune~solidly secure and Cesarine
8 I,I | say no more. Honor before fortune.~Come, go to bed, dear friend,
9 I,I | both~sexes. The idea is a fortune; I repeat it. Mon Dieu!
10 I,I | who swells out with his fortune and~avoids me at the Bourse.
11 I,II | Paris on foot to seek his fortune, with one louis in his~pocket.
12 I,II | by his desire to make his fortune;~if he lacked cleverness
13 I,II | expected to~win so large a fortune, and he owed it to happy
14 I,II | purchase money down with the~fortune of his wife.~ ~"Keep the
15 I,II | He then resolved to reach fortune~more rapidly, and determined
16 I,II | book, in~which he saw his fortune. Nevertheless, having little
17 I,II | disabilities, had earned their fortune, and whose good name she~
18 I,II | him to~the scaffold, to fortune, the bar, the army, commerce,
19 I,II | interests, and any means~to fortune he considered good. This
20 I,II | between the hulks and a vast fortune, was~necessarily vindictive,
21 I,II | come~meaning to make his fortune. The perfumer and his clerk
22 I,II | him on the high-road to fortune. Observing~the surprise
23 I,III| gradually eaten up~his whole fortune.~ ~The gloomy look on the
24 I,III| the bottom of the secret fortune so rapidly acquired by~du
25 I,III| demand upon public pity. A fortune, rapid and secure,~darted
26 I,III| thousand francs he was sure of fortune. He had the~eye of an eagle
27 I,III| increase his means of making a fortune than~augmented the fortune
28 I,III| fortune than~augmented the fortune itself. He was now in the
29 I,III| least you will win your~fortune. Eh, boy! what is it?"~ ~"
30 I,IV | in Paris he thought of fortune. Government alone can~pay
31 I,IV | I~look to art and not to fortune. Above all things I do not
32 I,V | unloaded many~a wagon. No fortune was ever more nobly won,
33 I,V | retired~from business, his fortune consisted, in the first
34 I,V | they have put their whole fortune into the affair."~ ~"How
35 I,V | will be your~daughter's fortune that you will take."~ ~"
36 I,V | Macassar, you lie! Popinot, our~fortune is made. We'll go to the
37 I,V | triumphant air, as if certain of fortune, was observed by the~clerks,
38 I,VI | instrument of his~future fortune. Popinot the judge had once
39 I,VI | not drawing a cheque on fortune to~entrust the launching
40 I,VI | the corner-stone of his fortune in~the Rue des Cinq-Diamants.
41 I,VI | a prospectus is often a fortune."~ ~"And for plebeians like
42 I,VI | myself," said Andoche, "fortune is nothing~more than a prospectus."~ ~"
43 I,VII| he is involving his whole fortune, against my advice,~in that
44 I,VII| Legion of honor, "I owe my fortune to Monsieur~Vauquelin. I
45 I,VII| of a timid lover.~ ~"My fortune depends on you, mademoiselle."~ ~"
46 I,VII| murmured~Popinot.~ ~"Hope for fortune," said Cesarine, with an
47 I,I | has wasted Roguin's whole fortune~and much more. There are
48 I,I | word, the flames of his fortune. Alexandre~Crottat, who
49 I,I | slave,--~just as if his fortune were not made."~ ~The wife
50 I,II | skirmishings of adverse fortune, Cesar employed his whole
51 I,II | clutch it by the mane, lets~fortune escape. Popinot felt that
52 I,II | and aunt, "I am secure; my fortune is~made," and carry to Birotteau
53 I,II | him~a thousand crowns was fortune. It was in this campaign
54 I,III| I have made an~honorable fortune with infinite pains. I began
55 I,III| foolish as to spend her own~fortune in paying debts contracted
56 I,III| the care bestowed upon her~fortune, the paper-knife in chiselled
57 I,III| hand once seemed to me a fortune. I have got his money;~suppose
58 I,III| I who have protected her fortune, which was strangely involved
59 I,III| affairs. The origin of my fortune is pure, as I have~just
60 I,III| you? My oil will make your fortune!"~ ~"Yes, monsieur. But
61 I,IV | der~limids of my privade fortune."~ ~The exhilarating balm
62 I,IV | and dey could~haf made der fortune, but dey would not wait
63 I,VI | At this speech, all the fortune creditors congratulate each
64 I,VI | been~disproportional to his fortune. It appears that the ball--"~ ~"
65 I,VII| that they were to him a fortune. He~walked forward almost
|