Part, Chapter
1 I,II | Sometimes the poor lad felt with pain that he was bound
2 I,II | increased the respect generally felt for him, and won him the~
3 I,III| hour of the day,--Popinot felt sure that he must intend
4 I,III| the reason why he suddenly felt an interest in a matter
5 I,III| without the shame of it. He felt the necessity of having
6 I,III| failure would, as du Tillet felt certain, follow~his cue;
7 I,III| rejoin little Popinot, he felt a~fierce heat in his entrails,
8 I,III| monsieur!" said the clerk, who felt his shirt getting wet with~
9 I,IV | his extreme confidence, felt uneasy. The~excited manner
10 I,IV | he had made them, and he felt he was legally~entitled
11 I,IV | Birotteau sneezed~while he felt in his pockets for the deeds.
12 I,IV | thanked him~profusely and felt like forgiving the disdainful
13 I,V | short that it looked like felt. His delicate mouth showed~
14 I,V | increased the~sympathy felt in his neighborhood for
15 I,VI | Canals are~a want especially felt in the departments; they
16 I,VI | friend, here present!"~ ~"I felt," said the author modestly, "
17 I,I | which they involved;~he felt he had more irons in the
18 I,I | the street~for which he felt a violent antipathy; it
19 I,I | francs worth of labor, and he~felt that in so doing he had
20 I,I | it~elsewhere. Birotteau felt his head swim, as though
21 I,I | he reached the house he felt that inward faintness~which
22 I,II | securities were required he~felt no doubt of Popinot's devotion,
23 I,II | fortune escape. Popinot felt that his suit would prosper
24 I,II | paper, the poor~perfumer felt something that was like
25 I,III| eye as to the foot which felt the soft thickness of~its
26 I,III| Cesar~to eat. The poor man felt he was saved, and gave way
27 I,III| Cesar signed the note, and felt the ten bank-notes in his
28 I,III| set at liberty, though he felt within him that indefinable
29 I,III| pitifully small at the Kellers, felt a craving to imitate those~
30 I,III| obscurity of the hackney~coach, felt his tears falling hot upon
31 I,IV | his ordinary clothes. He felt a sneer in every word.~ ~"
32 I,IV | creature behind him, who felt himself pushed into~a gulf,
33 I,IV | coarse jollity,~and he had felt the man's vulgarity so keenly,
34 I,IV | everything."~ ~Birotteau felt stabbed to the heart by
35 I,V | thought you so rich that I felt at~liberty to spend my savings
36 I,V | an egoist! Even~Cesarine felt within her heart an emotion
37 I,V | manage his household. Popinot felt that his~was the only house
38 I,VI | bankrupt~gathered courage as he felt the indulgences shown to
39 I,VI | dull, distraught face. He felt, with~self-reproach, that
40 I,VII| that the lover of Cesarine felt an instinctive~hatred for
41 I,VII| and manners will long be felt, to behold the~notariat
42 I,VII| Pillerault, who held his arm, felt him shudder inwardly.~ ~"
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