Part, Chapter
1 I,I | we have enemies. Half our friends in the quarter are~our enemies.
2 I,I | they~will prey upon their friends without compunction. Charity
3 I,II | the clerk's life. A few friends carried the belligerent
4 I,II | made up the circle of their friends. In~spite of the royalist
5 I,II | Moreover, the twenty or thirty friends he~had collected about him
6 I,II | Sunday, they~received their friends. The families who made up
7 I,III| risk if he got his nearest friends into the net. "A~friend,"
8 I,III| forget everything,--wives,~friends, and those they have benefited.
9 I,IV | the king. I assemble~my friends as much--to celebrate the
10 I,IV | different. I assemble my friends as much to celebrate the
11 I,V | the young man, two hundred friends followed the body to the~
12 I,V | four times a year to his friends, at Roland's, Rue du Hasard,
13 I,V | Vauquelin.~ ~"I assemble my friends"--he rose from his heels,
14 I,V | am~about to assemble my friends, not only to celebrate the
15 I,VI | Neither~he, nor I, nor his friends, nor his enemies will forget
16 I,VI | are about to assemble our friends, as much to~celebrate the
17 I,VI | days hence, to~assemble our friends, as much to celebrate the
18 I,VI | clock in the evening~the two friends, seated before the fireplace
19 I,VII| about to assemble a few friends to~commemorate my promotion
20 I,VII| second arrondissement. The friends of the family~were easy
21 I,VII| frightened at the number of friends whom they~did not know they
22 I,VII| bourgeois balls, claiming friends whose names they~did not
23 I,VII| bedchamber to the~king, friends of Ragon, and their daughter,
24 I,VII| Monsieur and Madame Thuillier,~friends of theirs."~ ~"We will see
25 I,I | my~friend, if there are friends,--you in whom I took an
26 I,I | must beware of our best friends, of Pillerault, Ragon,~everybody."~ ~
27 I,II | sprang like a lion on his friends and acquaintances; he~haunted
28 I,II | to be corrected. Keeping friends with everybody, he brought~
29 I,II | the troop of courtiers,~friends, and self-seekers pressed
30 I,III| Nucingen and I are the best friends in the~world; he would not
31 I,IV | convokes the traders: 'My friends, let us go to work:~write
32 I,IV | recognize him! We used to be friends. If we have~quarrelled so
33 I,IV | daughters,~compromise their best friends, pawn what does not belong
34 I,V | the morning the two brave friends,--one an old~soldier, the
35 I,V | Birotteau. Well, what is it, my friends?"~ ~"We can tell you nothing
36 I,V | tender daughter, two good friends,--your uncle and our~dear
37 I,V | situation. You have influential~friends,--the Duc and the Duchesse
38 I,V | the money from one of my friends, at five per cent."~ ~"Hey!
39 I,V | teaches~us to know our true friends."~ ~The daughter at last
40 I,VI | warmest greetings~of his friends reminded him the more bitterly
41 I,VII| none~but our particular friends,--the Abbe Loraux, the Ragons,
42 I,VII| surrounded by his nearest friends,--Lebas, president of the~
43 I,VII| a number of~his faithful friends arrived, all eager for the
44 I,VII| justice. Birotteau found more friends~awaiting him in the solemn
45 I,VII| he was surrounded by his friends and borne in~triumph down
46 I,VII| Where are you taking me, my friends?" he said to Joseph Lebas,~
47 I,VII| the minds of the~three old friends.~ ~It is a fault of youth
|