Part, Chapter
1 I,I | of your soul. You are the master, after all.~You earned your
2 I,II | the time that he became master of his own~heart he had
3 I,II | head-clerk. Birotteau, now master at twenty years of age~of
4 I,II | seduce her, and judged his master very much as the wife judged
5 I,II | people suppose that his master had~dismissed him out of
6 I,III| proposal that his august master could have made to him at~
7 I,III| head-~clerk. Anselme and his master turned without a word in
8 I,III| notary. Anselme followed his master at a distance, without being
9 I,III| his blood could be seen to master the soundness of his body.
10 I,III| flung it round his neck.~ ~Master of Roguin's secret, du Tillet
11 I,III| comrade as a dog to his master. Claparon was an ugly~poodle,
12 I,III| the clerk, when he saw his~master's pale face.~ ~"Ah, my lad!
13 I,III| great undertaking;~no man is master of himself at such a moment.
14 I,III| For whom?" asked his master.~ ~"For Mademoiselle Cesarine."~ ~"
15 I,IV | of course my husband is master in his own~house,--give
16 I,IV | escaped all contact with her master by doing her work and keeping
17 I,V | revolving in the mind of the master of "The Queen of Roses."~ ~"
18 I,V | dress of the cashier and his master had thrown~them all into
19 I,V | Birotteau.~ ~"You are the master," she answered.~ ~Cesar
20 I,V | You are very lucky if the master helps you," said Celestin.~ ~
21 I,V | the tickets. "Lucky! the master~has found out that Popinot
22 I,VII| Tillet, bowing to his old master.~ ~Among the eight symphonies
23 I,III| boulevard.~ ~"Come, my dear master,--for you were once my master,--
24 I,III| master,--for you were once my master,--tell me, are you~in want
25 I,III| ever made of it. The~former master and his former clerk at
26 I,III| pocket, he~was no longer master of himself. A moment sooner,
27 I,III| matter with you, my dear master?" asked du Tillet. "Would~
28 I,III| understand you, my dear master;~somebody has told you that
29 I,III| If you had not been my master, on my~word! I--"~ ~"You
30 I,III| the household work for the master and his three clerks. Popinot,~
31 I,III| boy!" uttered by his old~master, Popinot raised his head,
32 I,III| the partner of their own master. Birotteau, so~pitifully
33 I,III| looking on, and~that the master of the establishment had
34 I,III| a~good round sum on her master and mistress. On the appointed
35 I,IV | promise to show him in to his master the~moment that du Tillet
36 I,IV | diabolical gleam.~ ~"My dear master, the Bank has refused to
37 I,IV | protruded, like the wig~of its master, in half a hundred libertine
38 I,IV | Lombards. "My nephew, your old master may~find himself so involved
39 I,IV | UNGRATEFUL!" said his master, who spent his whole remaining
40 I,V | My dear and beloved master!" he cried, wiping the perspiration
41 I,V | if she loved you. Your master," he said, pointing~to Cesar, "
42 I,V | see the prostration of his~master.~ ~"Among the letters this
43 I,V | despair, for they loved their master. At four o'clock~the good
44 I,V | cruelly with the sorrow of his master. Anselme was not~actually
45 I,V | appointed the Comte de Fontaine master of his~household; there
46 I,V | supplied the place of~both master and mistress.~ ~Madame Cesar
47 I,VI | overtaken by misfortune is then~master of the situation, and proceeds
48 I,VI | prolonged agony for his old master; and this is how he did
49 I,VI | he wanted to see his old master dishonored, lost, and~vilified.
50 I,VI | debtor. When the former master~of "The Queen of Roses"
51 I,VII| spoliation of his~former master; the lands about the Madeleine,
52 I,VII| du Tillet.~ ~"Ah! my dear master," he cried, "I am delighted
53 I,VII| for it,~imitating his old master in necessary expenses, but
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