Part, Chapter
1 I,I | and I often see~him coming home in the mornings: where from?
2 I,I | compunction. Charity begins at~home. He is intimate with that
3 I,II | elegantly dressed, came home late, and was seen at~the
4 I,III| Champs Elysees returning home~early in the morning. The
5 I,III| carriage, and let me walk~home on foot."~ ~These words
6 I,V | arrangements of his modest home, consisting of an antechamber,
7 I,V | seldom received any one at home. In his bedroom, as plain
8 I,V | often talk of you in~our home: a name that is in the heart
9 I,V | nut will revolutionize our~home. From this day forth there
10 I,V | make her mistress of their home, and be himself the first
11 I,V | harvest of~love in her own home, and reasoned by induction;
12 I,VI | If~the enlargement of my home and its decoration were
13 I,VI | his tailor had just sent home, rigid as a picket-stake,
14 I,VI | canals.~Well, when he gets home to the bank, and we go to
15 I,VII| which a stationer had~sent home that morning, printed on
16 I,VII| difficulty of preparing at~home the various viands demanded
17 I,VII| in blood. When Cesar~came home to dinner, he was pale with
18 I,VII| Grindot; "you are in your~own home."~ ~Brown was the prevailing
19 I,VII| as I may say, partly at home here, Monsieur l'academicien,"~
20 I,I | My God! I cannot go home as I am," said Birotteau. "
21 I,I | Alexandre Crottat took him home. The thought of appearing
22 I,II | and not to take~from my home the peace I need so much
23 I,II | not meet a soldier coming home from Saint-Roch, my request~
24 I,II | than killed."~ ~He went home smiling gaily, and his gaiety
25 I,III| la Chaussee-d'Antin; come~home with me."~ ~They entered
26 I,III| in all his glory. When~at home, Madame Ragon completed
27 I,III| Constance as they drove home, "go and see Monsieur le~
28 I,IV | Paris. Birotteau returned home, shattered in~mind and body.
29 I,IV | some~now."~ ~Birotteau went home broken-hearted, not perceiving
30 I,V | embraced his uncle and rushed home, made notes to the amount~
31 I,V | Perrin-~Gasselin on his way home, in search of Madame Madou,
32 I,V | find herself alone in her home as~she would have wept for
33 I,V | enjoyment of her~sumptuous home, came to live in the wretched
34 I,V | their heads to look at the~home where they had passed the
35 I,VI | little Molineux~returned home "honored," so he said, "
36 I,VII| Birotteau.~ ~As he went home the poor man passed, inadvertently,
37 I,VII| the windows of his former home. For the first time~since
38 I,VII| before the windows of his old home,~and they had come to the
39 I,VII| and Ragon.~ ~"To your own home."~ ~"No; it is only three
40 I,VII| the coach to go to his own home, where the~marriage contract
41 I,VII| that awaited him in his old home. He~entered the house, and
42 I,VII| himself once more in his~own home, when he saw his salon,
43 Add | The Magic Skin~A Second Home~A Prince of Bohemia~Letters
44 Add | Mystery~Honorine~A Second Home~Farewell (Adieu)~Scenes
45 Add | Jean-Baptiste~A Second Home~The Purse~ ~Mongenod~The
46 Add | Racket~Pierrette~A Second Home~A Daughter of Eve~ ~Saillard,
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