Part, Chapter
1 I,I | merely speaking of it. If you knew what he~wished to make of
2 I,II | head. The day came when he knew all the~articles, and their
3 I,II | the Rue de la Sourdiere, knew nothing of the existence
4 I,II | people of his own circle knew him superficially, and~were
5 I,II | and~respect in public; she knew him to be a man who, in
6 I,II | the~Turks the Moors; he knew no guide but his own interests,
7 I,II | as he was, his ambition knew no bounds. With one~comprehensive
8 I,II | of~the Norman, who well knew the worthy people among
9 I,II | labor which the good man knew to~be useless. In coming
10 I,II | great banking-houses. No one knew from whence this youth~had
11 I,II | tranquillity, of which, as they knew, business affairs stood
12 I,II | Venus of Milo that all who knew her recognized the~likeness
13 I,III| his work,--for~Birotteau knew all about it from experience.
14 I,III| protection in those who knew him: we love the weak, and
15 I,III| him useful.~ ~Du Tillet knew the enormous underground
16 I,III| and~Pharisees; and he well knew it. But to a poor devil
17 I,III| assassinate the man who knew him to be~guilty of a petty
18 I,IV | mischievous legal proceedings. He knew all the~tricks of Parisian
19 I,IV | think yourself happy. If you~knew to what lengths of ingratitude
20 I,V | good people of that circle knew each other~too well to care
21 I,V | announced. The~academician knew that the perfumer and deputy-mayor
22 I,V | the finest in his life. He knew you, he~venerated you, without
23 I,V | paper~before lettering. I knew that you wished for it and
24 I,V | oil is good; if the public~knew that, we should be lost.
25 I,VI | the Greeks and Romans, knew~a thing or two, and were
26 I,VII| between them. Gaudissart, who knew the career of~Claparon,
27 I,I | though they perfectly well knew Cesar's opinions.~ ~"I would
28 I,I | pay," said Birotteau, who knew~not how to lie.~ ~He took
29 I,I | extent of his plans; and he knew him~to be mentally incapable
30 I,II | confided the fatal~truth, knew all his secrets. Many stolen
31 I,II | Popinot (about whom Cesar knew nothing) was~succeeding;
32 I,II | manufactory since the~ball; he knew nothing therefore of the
33 I,III| poor man's thought, and who knew as well how to cross-~question
34 I,III| merchant as Popinot the judge knew how to make a criminal~betray
35 I,III| old~patron.~ ~Du Tillet knew very well what it was, for
36 I,III| real~authority. Birotteau knew that he must now reveal
37 I,IV | very good; I thought I knew everything relating~to rentals
38 I,IV | send in search of him.~She knew that in such circumstances
39 I,IV | she~behaved as though she knew the reasons for his absence;
40 I,V | Neither Popinot nor Pillerault knew or could know that Bidault,
41 I,V | said Joseph Lebas, "you knew very well~that the Bank
42 I,VI | to the bottom. Pillerault knew the difference. It was,
43 I,VI | striking him down. Each knew~that his conduct was scrupulously
44 I,VII| alert to avoid those he knew~as he crept along beside
45 I,VII| hatred for du Tillet. He knew nothing of the theft and
46 I,VII| and Popinot. The lovers~knew that Birotteau never passed
47 I,VII| defeated by this argument. He knew the human~heart well enough
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