Part, Chapter
1 I,I | you will hire, our head clerk, and your lady's-maid~(yes,
2 I,I | scamp du Tillet, our former~clerk; and I see nothing good
3 I,I | exclude him from my house,--a clerk for~whom I endorsed to the
4 I,II | he complained, the head~clerk would smile with a jovial
5 I,II | Birotteau, promoted to be second clerk,~profited by the occasion
6 I,II | ineffable~delight. The second clerk of "The Queen of Roses,"
7 I,II | obscurity of Birotteau~saved the clerk's life. A few friends carried
8 I,II | woman, of whom a libertine clerk would scarcely have dreamed,~
9 I,II | purchase was made. The poor clerk had had little to~do to
10 I,II | traveller, then a perfumer's clerk in Paris, where he turned
11 I,II | light and jesting mind.~Mere clerk as he was, his ambition
12 I,II | much amazement that his clerk went out in~the evening
13 I,II | never left her counter. The clerk who had~charge of the desk
14 I,II | ledger and found that his clerk's account had not been~debited.~ ~"
15 I,II | fortune. The perfumer and his clerk passed the~whole night in
16 I,III| followed by Celestin, the head-~clerk. Anselme and his master
17 I,III| daring;~beginning as a mere clerk, he had risen to be a notary;
18 I,III| perceive that~the perfumer's clerk had flung it round his neck.~ ~
19 I,III| matter, monsieur?" asked the clerk, when he saw his~master'
20 I,III| Oh, monsieur!" said the clerk, who felt his shirt getting
21 I,III| lover give~place to the clerk. Popinot, are you a loyal
22 I,IV | monsieur? I went to your old clerk, du Tillet, and he~would
23 I,IV | liaison/ of his former clerk with the~lawyer's wife made
24 I,V | except in happiness. A clerk~till thirty years of age,
25 I,V | will marry Roguin's head-~clerk," the poor lame Anselme,
26 I,V | Celestin and the second clerk. On the third floor the
27 I,VI | besides," said the happy clerk, producing from his~pocket
28 I,VI | relieve~you of them. I am a clerk at Monsieur Birotteau's.'
29 I,VII| Xandrot," said Roguin to his clerk, as they left the house, "
30 I,I | s account,~followed by a clerk sent by Felix, a waiter
31 I,I | Before~doing so, the head clerk made him repeat the unheard-of
32 I,I | francs due to him. The second clerk went~through the books and
33 I,I | Du Tillet was your clerk; he has a good head; he
34 I,II | he entered his shop, the clerk who had carried round the
35 I,III| you here?" said the former clerk to his old~patron.~ ~Du
36 I,III| former master and his former clerk at last reached an elegant~
37 I,III| take the hand of his former clerk, "I give you back my~esteem."~ ~"
38 I,III| the lands to his former clerk, who~pretended to open his
39 I,III| of gratitude to his old clerk. "Well, a benefit is never
40 I,III| up.~ ~"It is amazing! A clerk becomes a merchant in twenty-four
41 I,IV | eight, just as his former clerk was putting on a dressing-~
42 I,V | Constance waited while a clerk was sent to~bring the Abbe
43 I,VI | understood each~other. The poor clerk resolved to attain an end
44 I,VI | associates, who met the clerk could see no~vestige of
45 I,VII| Cesar's buttonhole. The poor~clerk looked at himself again
46 I,VII| into the hand of the poor~clerk, who listened to this speech
47 I,VII| still due to his former clerk. The worthy man went to
48 I,VII| renders such a judgment.~Clerk, call the next case."~ ~
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