Part, Chapter
1 I,I | the blush; hein? Do you think I~don't love my country?
2 I,I | love France."~ ~"Do you think you have got any enemies,
3 I,I | are much mistaken~if you think a citizen has paid his debt
4 I,I | such a fool (though you think me a great fool, you do)
5 I,I | reasonable, my love. Do you think that at thirty-~seven years
6 I,II | large cities,--made Cesar think the life~of Paris very hard.
7 I,II | asleep without having time to think of running away,~for he
8 I,II | the books of the firm and~think only of their business.
9 I,II | Birotteau, who might with reason think himself at the apogee of~
10 I,III| right principle. But now, think of it.~Macassar Oil will
11 I,III| intend to work it myself. I think of retiring from~business.
12 I,III| are queer; still, I~don't think that Cesarine--And then
13 I,IV | Grindot.~ ~"How much do you think it will cost?"~ ~"An architect
14 I,IV | Ah! madame, do you think an architect who seeks to
15 I,IV | in my head that I can't think of my stomach. Do me the
16 I,IV | landlord, monsieur, and you may think yourself happy. If you~knew
17 I,IV | answered Birotteau.~ ~"Think what my first floor will
18 I,IV | merry look.~ ~"I did not think there could exist such--
19 I,IV | ones,~my dear man. Just think! grocers sell their beggarly
20 I,V | tell no~falsehood, and I think that those who use it will
21 I,V | preserve~their hair."~ ~"Do you think that the royal Academy of
22 I,V | conscience will not allow me to think the oil of~nuts a prodigy."~ ~"
23 I,VI | asked about them?"~ ~"Do you think me such a ninny?" cried
24 I,VI | betting at billiards, and think him a mere idler; but he~
25 I,VI | only a void, he began to think him dangerous.~ ~"All's
26 I,VI | such stupids~that they'll think your oil is meant to facilitate
27 I,VI | the Faubourg du Temple, I think you had better~take a formal
28 I,I | an umbrella we generally think it is~protected from the
29 I,I | Lourdois; "people would think~twice before launching into
30 I,I | whom nothing is sacred: think~of squandering the trust
31 I,I | receipt; the~creditors will think I am an accomplice if I
32 I,I | last fancy? None of us, who think ourselves~so virtuous, know
33 I,I | decided; and he began to think highly of the~late commercial
34 I,II | me; but later,~when you think of your wife and daughter,
35 I,II | to a sitting position and think over his troubles. Cesarine
36 I,II | the theatres at~night. "Think of my oil, dear friend;
37 I,II | How can he find time to think of business?" thought Birotteau,
38 I,III| give you a credit if they think you have~got a good thing,
39 I,III| Everybody knows what I think about failure!~Failure is
40 I,III| You are not the first to think her beautiful; others have
41 I,III| they rose from table, "I think those young~people love
42 I,IV | answered, naively. "Do you think you could discount his~signature
43 I,IV | you," he began; "don't~you think you ought to write and tell
44 I,V | Cesarine devotedly, and I think~you can satisfy the claims
45 I,V | which you find yourself; and think of me~as one who loves you
46 I,V | creditors."~ ~"They will think you are abstracting large
47 I,V | cease to behold it, and think upon the~humiliations heaped
48 I,V | Dishonor has come;~I must now think only of reparation."~ ~The
49 I,V | a merchant who does not think of failure is like a general~
50 I,V | shop, and I shall never~think again of what we once were.
51 I,VI | merchandise.~All parties think that bankruptcy will give
52 I,VII| again, my poor~Cesar. I think we have all behaved well
53 I,VII| to my pain."~ ~"I did not think," she said, "that after
54 I,VII| Anselme was saying, "do not think me so base and~grasping
55 I,VII| that is my largest debt. I think sometimes I shall die~before
56 I,VII| It is a fault of youth to think the whole world vigorous
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