Part, Chapter
1 I,I | you think a citizen has paid his debt to his country
2 I,I | the contracts should~be paid in money, for he is not
3 I,I | to you. The~ground once paid for, we have only to cross
4 I,II | to him like a~dog. No one paid attention to his weariness,
5 I,II | same manner," he said as he paid for the handkerchiefs.~ ~
6 I,II | establishment for which he had paid three quarters of the price
7 I,II | intentions of a Tartuffe. He paid court to Madame Cesar, tried
8 I,II | are the one who~will get paid as long as there is anything
9 I,III| possessed of the property paid over by the~perfumer and
10 I,IV | receive~which Mere Madou paid them a visit in the fine
11 I,V | clerks; this sum was to be paid in full at~the end of five
12 I,V | outstanding bills chanced to be paid.~ ~The dining-room and the
13 I,VI | Bouchot, expecting to~succeed, paid the money; they failed while
14 I,VI | and forty~thousand francs paid to my order."~ ~"That is
15 I,VII| array, these worthy people paid~twenty-two visits in the
16 I,VII| purposely for the ball, they paid no heed to the splendor
17 I,I | until the whole debt is paid off. If~bankrupt, he should
18 I,I | to have a share, would be paid, like his~commission, in
19 I,I | creditors who ought to be paid in ready money, had asked
20 I,I | had never lost money, who paid~when they pleased, and among
21 I,I | decent feeling he may have paid them over to~Claparon, and
22 I,I | Happily, Claparon had only paid~over, to my care, one hundred
23 I,I | getting a good~thing!--and paid a hundred thousand down.
24 I,I | price of landed property. Paid by whom? By~Birotteau. Why
25 I,I | receipt for moneys not yet paid. He~who signs, pays. I don'
26 I,I | which the lender never paid over; then, of course, he~
27 I,I | Temple, as the mortgage never paid the money,--in all, one
28 I,II | charge; he insisted on being paid within twenty-four~hours.
29 I,II | notes with Claparon would be~paid; there was nothing to fear.
30 I,II | articles which had to be~paid for,--on the contrary, he
31 I,II | for,--on the contrary, he paid money on occasion, and gave
32 I,II | mighty revolution!--the~paid advertisement. The name
33 I,II | anxiously at the clock. No one paid the~least attention to the
34 I,III| Notes."~ ~"Are they paid?"~ ~"They are not yet due."~ ~"
35 I,III| But supposing you have paid more than the present value
36 I,III| on sentiment. If you had paid two hundred~thousand francs,
37 I,III| another one hundred~thousand paid down in advance for possession
38 I,III| Parisian custom, notes were paid on the thirtieth, if the~
39 I,III| it~would be well if she paid everything, but she cannot
40 I,IV | He took~a cabriolet, and paid the driver well to be taken
41 I,IV | I endorsed it,~so I've paid it. I shall send after you;
42 I,V | Claparon, and which must be paid in any~state of the case,
43 I,V | Cesar, "but you shall be paid in course~of time if I have
44 I,VI | declares that as he has~paid a year in advance, and having
45 I,VI | attention~--"and, the year being paid for, that he has the right
46 I,VI | to have all~his advances paid in full, and that he was
47 I,VI | dividend which was to be paid over to the sellers. The
48 I,VI | should work till he had paid his creditors in full to
49 I,VII| to say to Cesar, "We are paid."~ ~At the dessert, the
50 I,VII| dividend,~and you have now paid him the balance of his claim
51 I,VII| thousand francs which I paid to Monsieur~Birotteau, there
52 I,VII| to~these sixty thousand paid for the relinquishment of
53 I,VII| happiness of knowing that I~have paid you in full."~ ~This speech,
54 I,VII| considered the price which he paid~to the creditors for your
55 I,VII| creditors when you have paid them all in full?"~ ~Cesar
56 I,VII| he said, "they would be paid; but it would be selling
57 I,VII| interest thereon, has been paid,~gentlemen; and the payment
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