Part, Chapter
1 I,I | out of the back-shop, the present dining-room, and kitchen.
2 I,I | now, at~which time, the present leases having expired, we
3 I,I | crush others? Isn't our~present fortune enough for us? When
4 I,I | to his wife. Besides, the present owners of that land must
5 I,II | other~merchants, who were present on business with Birotteau,
6 I,II | are but poems. May~this present history be the poem of middle-class
7 I,III| shows no trace of it. In the present instance the lines of the~
8 I,III| jump as Curtius. In the present affair he was~to represent
9 I,IV | by Monsieur Cayron, here present," he said, with a sly wink~
10 I,IV | pancreas, and which, at the present moment, had a~blood-sucker
11 I,IV | former proprietor of~her present business (an affair which
12 I,VI | Vauquelin, who~made him a present of a recipe for mixing the
13 I,VI | which young people of the~present day who have had the happiness
14 I,VI | perhaps do us the honor to be present at our ball?"~said Madame
15 I,VI | own ill-paid~work. At the present moment he had drunk to the
16 I,VI | gave him a share in the present affair~of ushering into
17 I,VI | by the~thousand, to the present day (another /piece justificative/):--~ ~ ~
18 I,VI | of my young friend, here present!"~ ~"I felt," said the author
19 I,VII| do us the~honor of being present?"~ ~"Willingly," said the
20 I,VII| de la Billardiere is to present me as a~chevalier to-morrow
21 I,VII| out together, won't they present arms?"~ ~"Yes, wherever
22 I,VII| there are sentries they will present arms."~ ~Just at this moment
23 I,VII| Vauquelin. I have the honor to present to your lordship Monsieur
24 I,VII| Laughs ring loudly; all~present surrender to the amusement
25 I,I | whole of his life, past, present, and to come,~--it was not
26 I,II | to day, he saw only the present moment.~He resolved to attempt,
27 I,II | he thought he had only to present his~name and be admitted:
28 I,III| have paid more than the present value of the~property, where
29 I,IV | but not convertible at present; you must fail within a~
30 I,V | The four individuals present,--Cesar, his wife, Cesarine,
31 I,V | of Monsieur Popinot, here present,--less the discount, of~
32 I,V | Anselme, and Celestin were present. The~papers which the head-clerk
33 I,V | came into the eyes of all present except Cesar;~he rose, took
34 I,V | silence, during which all present were affected~by the emotions
35 I,VI | pretended, are expected to be~present and choose the provisional
36 I,VI | commercial courts which~up to the present time have followed one after
37 I,VI | ball--"~ ~"At which you were present," interrupted Pillerault.~ ~"--
38 I,VI | are indifferent, can never present such a spectacle of~disaster.
39 I,VII| of her tenderness, ever-~present yet at the moment forced,
40 I,VII| his feelings. Under the present circumstances it was doubly
41 I,VII| appartement was~made ready to present to Cesar's eyes the same
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