Part, Chapter
1 I,I | She tried to grasp her husband, but her hand fell on a
2 I,I | upon the bed and saw her husband's night-cap, which~still
3 I,I | of the room to help her husband, whom she~supposed to be
4 I,I | Good-day," replied the husband. "Just listen; I say good-day
5 I,II | the~anecdotes with which husband and wife exalted the memory
6 I,II | Pillerault accepted him~as her husband.~ ~"My little girl," said
7 I,II | Pillerault, "you have won a good~husband. He has a warm heart and
8 I,II | rise in rents, pushed her husband~into becoming chief tenant
9 I,II | heavy expenses. Neither husband nor wife~considered money
10 I,II | of~these appearances the husband often quaked, while the
11 I,II | contemptuous word about her husband.~Madame Birotteau alone
12 I,II | thought superior were like her~husband. Such conduct contributed
13 I,II | religious feelings of her husband, and who thought it a~crime
14 I,II | the secret reason to her husband, she advised him to send~
15 I,II | balance had been added up. Husband and wife resolved to~keep
16 I,III| situation, and treated her husband as~a courtesan treats an
17 I,III| over wife, mistress, and husband. Madame Roguin, when told
18 I,III| gave to the man whom her husband confided~in; for by this
19 I,IV | monsieur,--though of course my husband is master in his own~house,--
20 I,V | they might be in many ways, husband and wife were noble by~nature,
21 I,V | her tacit assent to her husband's projects.~ ~"Now, then,"
22 I,VI | the intoxication of her husband.~ ~Madame Ragon, a tall
23 I,VII| trimmings, which was her husband's "surprise."~ ~"Monsieur,
24 I,VII| costs, nor of blaming her~husband; and for the following reason:
25 I,VII| daughter not to poison her husband's~pleasure by any doubts
26 I,VII| she~threw herself into her husband's arms and said to him with
27 I,VII| said Madame Roguin to her husband as they~went through the
28 I,VII| overheard her saying to her husband: "Don't fling yourself upon
29 I,I | Madame Birotteau that her husband had had a rush of~blood
30 I,I | days at the bedside of her husband, who seemed~to her at times
31 I,I | Constance, wearied out, took her husband's place in~bed.~ ~"Poor
32 I,III| strangely involved in~her husband's affairs. The origin of
33 I,III| Madame Cesar governed~her husband; for though it is possible
34 I,III| of how~unfitted her poor husband was to grapple with misfortune.
35 I,IV | of assent, saying to her husband, "Are you~going to buy perfumery?"
36 I,IV | sacrificed her own~anxiety to her husband's commercial reputation:
37 I,IV | persuasion to retain her husband, who~wished to sleep on
38 I,V | all is not lost. But your husband~could not bear the uncertainty
39 I,V | she was~thus sparing her husband from distress, saw Popinot
40 I,V | mademoiselle will accept me as her husband, on the~day when you have
41 I,V | happened to be with her husband,--whom Pillerault was persuading~
42 I,V | bankruptcy were over, her husband would be~officially appointed
43 I,VI | tender~manner that struck her husband.~ ~Birotteau took Popinot
44 I,VII| many meaning glances at her husband without bringing to~his
45 I,VII| said Constance to her husband, "I see you again, my poor~
46 I,VII| the love of a wife for her husband could deepen."~ ~These words
47 I,VII| chance had~not been felled. Husband and wife sat down beneath
48 I,VII| Lourdois, in a low voice to her husband.~ ~"If you ever need me,
49 I,VII| tell you, I could tell my husband. Du Tillet wished to seduce
50 I,VII| seduce me;~I informed my husband of it, and du Tillet was
51 I,VII| dismissed.~On the very day my husband was about to send him away,
52 I,VII| you not remember how my husband scolded us for an error
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