Part, Chapter
1 I,II | After a week's stay he went back~to Tours resolving never
2 I,II | crossed his hands~behind his back. When he thought he had
3 I,II | toes twice, and~dropped back heavily on his heels, as
4 I,II | advances, slackens,~sinks back, and slumbers. Our globe
5 I,III| suspicions of his wife came back to his mind; and instead
6 I,III| that gulf she was to fall back and become a~noted personage
7 I,III| straw, from whom he received back for himself~certain sums
8 I,III| find~out how far he would back the credit of his relation.
9 I,III| the Hundred Days, and came back at the second Restoration,~
10 I,III| which he might galvanize back to life when it suited him.
11 I,III| Indians than to send them back what~they are supposed to
12 I,IV | points of his toes, and fell~back upon his heels.~ ~"Besides,"
13 I,IV | then endeavor to get it back by niggardly~avarice. The
14 I,IV | with~difficulty keeping back the word /fools/.~ ~"Ah,
15 I,V | cried Cesar, as he got back to "The Queen of~Roses."~ ~"
16 I,V | his clerks, when he went back to~them, "the shop will
17 I,VI | points of his toes and fell back upon his~heels several times,
18 I,VI | about his speech; drawing back his hand when it~was imprudently
19 I,VI | loans, which find their way~back, in the end, to the pockets
20 I,VI | and ciphering."~ ~"To go back to the ministers," said
21 I,VI | childbirth. To drag~them back from that to hair is beyond
22 I,VII| soon have my first floor back again; the man will ruin~
23 I,VII| of the~basses, flings us back into the marshes of cold
24 I,I | on his toes and~dropping back on his heels,--~ ~"What
25 I,I | prosperous merchant takes back his note, and does not offer
26 I,I | Lourdois, drawing him to the back~of the shop, "my account
27 I,I | man. Besides, you will get back your~forty thousand francs.
28 I,I | Monsieur Birotteau gets back the forty thousand on his
29 I,II | does~not spring upon the back of success and clutch it
30 I,II | how many tears were driven~back during those waiting hours!
31 I,II | red ribbon, and~stepping back, opened the door of his
32 I,II | approves of the operation, come back here with him to-morrow
33 I,III| game. It is wiser to step back for a better leap. The affair~
34 I,III| groom and a blanket over the~back of his smoking thoroughbred.~ ~"
35 I,III| Madame Roguin will pay them back from her dower. I have~advised
36 I,III| former clerk, "I give you back my~esteem."~ ~"What! had
37 I,III| crossed his mind he came back to his original project,~
38 I,III| loans--well, they pay them back; and in so doing they are
39 I,III| explanation.~When he got back to the shop, he saw, not
40 I,IV | Monsieur de Nucingen, turning back when he was almost~at the
41 I,IV | influence with~Nucingen, ran back with the rapidity of a swallow,
42 I,IV | father,--he will not keep back one farthing; I shall resign~
43 I,IV | you gave Cayron has come back to us protested; I endorsed
44 I,IV | 15th, do you intend to send back my~receipt for the rent
45 I,IV | s door, he came hastily back again.~ ~"My dear Popinot,"
46 I,IV | was with him;~on his way back the old man had met him
47 I,V | like water from a duck's back,--a~judge!~ ~"From a commercial
48 I,V | yourself the right of~buying it back. I will draw up the deed."~ ~
49 I,V | its full extent; he fell back upon the sofa,~from thence
50 I,V | money, nor of paying it back at all in the day~of prosperity
51 I,V | Cesar, his mind turning back to the~Tourangian peasant
52 I,V | the Abbe~Loraux; "give it back to me on the day when I
53 I,V | Celestin and the abbe came back, and Cesar~signed his resignation.
54 I,V | they say that you have kept back part of your~assets; if
55 I,V | s decision and took~him back to his own room. The wily
56 I,VI | always supposed to keep back a hidden~treasure. The agent
57 I,VI | liquidation; in this way they get back~their money partly by the
58 I,VI | was before; he~receives back his securities, he continues
59 I,VI | Pillerault, insensibly got~back to gentler ways, which only
60 I,VI | Birotteau's courage came back to him, Pillerault, like~
61 I,VII| Anselme and Cesarine!~but come back by four o'clock."~ ~"Poor
62 I,VII| said Popinot, going to the~back of the shop, where du Tillet
63 I,VII| answered: "I shall never go back to business, monsieur. No~
64 I,VII| every limb, and hastened back to~Pillerault.~ ~Pillerault,
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