Part, Chapter
1 I,I | a year; and at the price things are now, for~they have doubled
2 I,I | into his own~hands. Such things happen. Do we know him well?
3 I,II | France they only~made fun of things which occupy the public
4 I,II | does~not occupy itself with things that do not succeed. Though
5 I,II | who could not endure the things of their~own country. A
6 I,II | itself to all organized things in this lower world? Death~
7 I,II | the~rise and fall of all things here below, could enlighten
8 I,III| look, and customers like things which~puzzle them."~ ~"They
9 I,III| said Popinot. "We must get things out as~cheap as we can,
10 I,IV | not to fortune. Above all things I do not want fame~before
11 I,IV | Cayron, "I have so many things~in my head that I can't
12 I,IV | players; he laughed at the things which make a bourgeois laugh;
13 I,V | the outer; about him all things harmonized,--dress and manners,~
14 I,V | uncle, how simply you say things! You touch my heart."~ ~"
15 I,V | commission. Wife, get my dressing~things all ready; I am going to
16 I,V | laughable extent.~ ~"Nine things!" cried Birotteau. "What!
17 I,V | and understood the deep things of the heart. Their praises~
18 I,VI | tired of seeing and touching things.~Hang it! you are supposed
19 I,VI | and telegraphy, and other things! This~oil is based on the
20 I,VII| taking possession of the good things and the pretty things~they
21 I,VII| good things and the pretty things~they had severally wished
22 I,I | said Cesar, "at the rate things are going now, a merchant~
23 I,I | magnificence about him, he said things that were wholly~incomprehensible
24 I,I | little table with writing-~things upon it,--among them the
25 I,II | uncle?"~ ~"Yes, bread. See things as they are, Cesar. /You
26 I,II | judges. You dash~through things. At the Palais de Justice
27 I,II | clerks, but at the rate things were now going, he would~
28 I,III| stupidity: "they told me certain things about your /liaison/ with~
29 I,III| resumed~Birotteau, "don't do things by halves."~ ~"What is it?"~ ~
30 I,IV | I have witnessed strange things. You~yourself have seen
31 I,V | is~so religious that, as things are now, his director, the
32 I,V | importance than greater things. The duke explained~Monsieur
33 I,VI | receipts. In this way many things are avoided,--dishonor,~
34 I,VI | Du Tillet had worked all things together to make the failure
35 I,VI | buckles, his two watches,--things which an honest man might
36 I,VI | conscience, to whom~all things are indifferent, can never
37 I,VII| profound study of men and things, which subdues the heart
38 I,VII| his clothes, his jewels, things of purely~personal use,--
39 I,VII| Youth sees neither men nor~things through spectacles; it colors
40 I,VII| religiously preserved the smallest things that~once belonged to Cesar
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