Part, Chapter
1 I,I | shouldn't be a distinguished~merchant, competing in the election
2 I,I | have made your money as a merchant?'"~ ~"Merchants are not
3 I,II | Lahore. But~the little retail merchant is ignorant from whence
4 I,II | their~own country. A French merchant must call his discoveries
5 I,III| devotion.~ ~"He is a true merchant; he will succeed," Cesar
6 I,III| dress-coat, and~look like a merchant already launched."~ ~This
7 I,IV | you are aware that a good~merchant ought to make money out
8 I,IV | cautious observer, or a merchant who had met with swindlers
9 I,IV | deputy-mayor, and an honorable merchant would not descend to such~
10 I,VI | s your chance!'"~ ~"Born merchant! he shall have my daughter!,"
11 I,VI | a grieved tone.~ ~"Born merchant!" repeated Birotteau.~ ~"
12 I,VI | in open day. The embryo~merchant had taken possession, the
13 I,VII| before the criminal courts. A merchant is amenable to the laws
14 I,I | uneasiness which the~young merchant inspired in his mind.~ ~
15 I,I | to bring his bill.~ ~"A merchant is never safe from commercial
16 I,I | assignee, and commissioner, the~merchant should be declared /insolvent
17 I,I | things are going now, a merchant~will soon be a licensed
18 I,I | with the good~nature of a merchant sure of his own standing;
19 I,I | such a case~a prosperous merchant takes back his note, and
20 I,I | judge, and you are a~clever merchant; you know very well that
21 I,III| how to cross-~question a merchant as Popinot the judge knew
22 I,III| the honorable and virtuous~merchant who had caught him, red-handed,
23 I,III| failure!~Failure is death to a merchant; I should die of it!"~ ~"
24 I,III| amazing! A clerk becomes a merchant in twenty-four hours,"~thought
25 I,IV | doubted no longer; he was a merchant, and new very well that~
26 I,IV | other hands than your~own. A merchant delivers himself over, bound
27 I,IV | hand and foot, to another~merchant; and mercy is a virtue not
28 I,IV | pay what I owe myself? No merchant will deny the~soundness
29 I,IV | was now explained.~ ~The merchant in oils, refined and otherwise,
30 I,V | Good heart and bad merchant, you will never lose my
31 I,V | go below," said the old merchant, taking the arm of the young~
32 I,V | everything in~business! a merchant who does not think of failure
33 I,V | defeated; he is only half a merchant. I, in~your position, would
34 I,VI | and filing his schedule, a merchant~should find some retired
35 I,VI | being an experienced retired merchant, to whom~the magistracy
36 I,VI | of transition whereby a merchant might rise,~without ridicule,
37 I,VI | debts and then releasing the~merchant, who then rebounds like
38 I,VI | prosperity of the restored merchant. The action of the~agent
39 I,VI | certificate that remits to the merchant a portion of his~debt, and
40 I,VI | in Paris, that~unless a merchant is involved to a large amount
41 I,VI | imitates the substantial merchant,~bows his head, and accepts
42 I,VI | assignee is~a "covered" merchant. It listens, and believes
43 I,VI | bankrupt~becomes once more a merchant, precisely such as he was
44 I,VI | failures,--the failure of the~merchant who means to repossess himself
45 I,VI | and the~failure of the merchant who has fallen into the
46 I,VI | substitute-judge,--a rich silk-~merchant, Liberal in politics, and
47 I,VI | himself above~it all, or for a merchant who expects to recover himself,
48 I,VI | transmutation, from which a clever~merchant tries to emerge in fresh
49 I,VI | were like so many~blows. A merchant cannot learn without a shock
50 I,VI | upon Pillerault. The old~merchant took them as a horse takes
51 I,VI | and not to be evaded. The~merchant who refused to appear would,
52 I,VI | that I~have seen a fallen merchant gaining, instead of losing,
53 I,VII| might be restored to the merchant who had never really lost~
54 I,VII| on the part of this~loyal merchant, his wife, and his daughter
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