Part, Chapter
1 I,I | how could he negotiate the affair?~Cesarine must have two
2 I,I | shake your head, but if~our affair succeeds I may become deputy
3 I,I | quarters. Come now! If this affair were~not as sure as bars
4 I,I | to tell him of it? Your affair looks to me like a theft,
5 I,I | you have to do with this affair,--you who~have made your
6 I,II | at the beginning of the affair.~Every one knows the result
7 I,II | ability. Ragon proposed the~affair to his head-clerk. Birotteau,
8 I,III| young man to examine into an affair in a~foreign country. It
9 I,III| offered the profits of the~affair, which to him was merely
10 I,III| careful examination~of the affair. Usurers never trust any
11 I,III| obtained an interest in the~affair, on condition that these
12 I,III| he had examined into the affair of the debts, and that~clever
13 I,III| own hand in~conducting the affair, that he might get the profits
14 I,III| he was to get out of the affair seemed an Eldorado. His~
15 I,III| Curtius. In the present affair he was~to represent half
16 I,III| We are afraid that the affair may get wind. I am much~
17 I,IV | her present business (an affair which had long fed the gossip
18 I,V | image of~probity. In the affair of the lands about the Madeleine,
19 I,V | their whole fortune into the affair."~ ~"How do they contrive
20 I,V | austere old man.~ ~"How is the affair arranged?" asked Pillerault,
21 I,V | suffer? However, that is your~affair. If you get a set-back,
22 I,V | to go to work, the land affair is settled.~Here, lock up
23 I,V | done right to agree to the affair," said Birotteau.~ ~"You
24 I,VI | had mixed him up in the affair. A judge~anxious to please
25 I,VI | for me, this triumph is an affair of~honor. My reward is to
26 I,VI | appointed to conclude the affair of the~lands about the Madeleine,
27 I,VI | Birotteau, wounded in the affair of~Saint-Roch, judges in
28 I,VI | him a share in the present affair~of ushering into the world
29 I,VII| Hey! hey! Well, it is your affair, Monsieur Birotteau," said~
30 I,I | been talking of the land affair with the judge," said Ragon~
31 I,I | funds were tied up in an affair with Nucingen. Roguin has
32 I,I | commercially. But this is an~affair of landed property. Now,
33 I,I | not to send them for an~affair which needs five years'
34 I,I | heard Claparon analyzing the affair~and summing it up with advice
35 I,II | last night about Roguin's affair, and the assassination of~
36 I,II | resumed. "I am engaged in an~affair of landed property, outside
37 I,II | Nucingen speak of that immense affair,--undertaken, I~believe,
38 I,II | the deeds relating to the affair of the~Madeleine," he said; "
39 I,II | discuss~the terms. If the affair is sound, we shall be willing,
40 I,III| must be satisfied that the affair is a sound~one. To wait
41 I,III| back for a better leap. The affair~does not suit us."~ ~This
42 I,III| Carminative Balm, the Roguin affair,~and his lawsuit about the
43 I,III| moment."~ ~"I know,--that affair of Roguin," replied du Tillet. "
44 I,III| Birotteau explained the affair of the lands to his former
45 I,IV | his real associates in an affair which began to look suspicious
46 I,IV | it in hand and manage the affair.' Very good! The~banker
47 I,V | committee on discounts. The affair of this unfortunate man,
48 I,VI | only one to attend to the affair: the duty of the other~is
49 I,VI | caught sight of it,--"my affair of the Rue Montorgeuil~is
50 I,VII| thanks to this extraordinary affair, I shall have my Cesarine.
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