Part, Chapter
1 I,I | away except to pass the night~in the guard-room. Did he
2 I,II | weariness, though many a night his~feet, blistered by the
3 I,II | life~of Paris very hard. At night he cried as he thought of
4 I,II | village near Andelys, came by night and~gave birth to a child
5 I,II | into effect, on a Saturday night when~Birotteau was making
6 I,II | his clerk passed the~whole night in examining accounts, a
7 I,III| s household.~ ~From the night of her marriage, the charming
8 I,III| lightning in a~saturnalian night. He promptly reassured Roguin,
9 I,III| been~making out during the night."~ ~"Well, my mind is made
10 I,IV | de la Billardiere's the night before.~ ~"Contrary to the
11 I,IV | architect; "it will take me~all night to draw the plans--we would
12 I,IV | spoke to me~about it in the night, and he begins it in the
13 I,IV | little~Molineux thought night and day of how he could
14 I,IV | contract rheumatism. But~at night no spot in Paris is more
15 I,IV | with assassination some night in the~passages about the
16 I,V | wife told me so this very night. She fears--"~ ~"That Roguin
17 I,V | We must move, during the night, all the furniture from~
18 I,VI | there were day workmen and night workmen--~arrested all the
19 I,VI | they~keep me awake many a night. I wish they didn't. I have
20 I,VII| preparations, carried on night and day, had given~rise.
21 I,VII| whispered. "La! la! a very good night to you,~Madame Cesar--Now,
22 I,VII| for which he was working~night and day with a fury that
23 I,I | she was assassinated last night by a captain in the army.~
24 I,II | heard at the~cafe David last night about Roguin's affair, and
25 I,II | in a dazed condition. The~night before, Popinot had waited
26 I,II | Diamants, sitting up all night, and working all Sunday
27 I,II | lobby of the theatres at~night. "Think of my oil, dear
28 I,II | Houssaye, having spent the night turning over in his mind
29 I,II | half-shadows of a~starlit night. On a table of immense size
30 I,III| warned you on that fatal night, in our old room which you~
31 I,III| where I often work all night, you would have seen a~little
32 I,III| sleep only~five hours a night."~ ~"Do not injure yourself,"
33 I,IV | the supper of the previous~night, might have enlightened
34 I,IV | Sevres, where he passed the night at an inn, maddened~with
35 I,IV | waited silently~through the night, mingling her prayers and
36 I,IV | harrowing emotions of that~night. He was sitting in a corner
37 I,VI | who~often heard him at night, through the partition,
38 I,VI | young girl. She sat~up at night, taxing her ingenuity to
39 I,VII| I shall lay my~head this night upon my pillow with the
40 I,VII| certain that during the night Cesar would go~over the
41 I,VII| she had~shone for a single night with fleeting splendor.
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