Part, Chapter
1 I,I | he bores me. He loves me better than~his own eyes; he would
2 I,I | calculating."~ ~"You had better wait till daylight for your
3 I,I | his kennel. Isn't it much better to come and visit our daughter~
4 I,I | Besides, we shall~talk better in bed, if it amuses you.
5 I,II | their prices and marks, better than any new-comer; and~
6 I,II | suited~her own ideas far better than the dangerous vanities
7 I,II | Birotteau~determined to get better results at any price, solely
8 I,II | fully counterbalanced by a~better employment of the time spent
9 I,III| Indies. Now, isn't it much better~to supply a French product
10 I,IV | befriended. Cayron wished nothing better~than to confine himself
11 I,IV | improved appartement on better terms. He watched and waited
12 I,V | cold slabs it will be~of better quality. It should be applied
13 I,V | feminine~tyranny, and knows better how to love than men of
14 I,V | eyes,--she wished for no better fate; her~instinct told
15 I,VI | intelligence. He will acquire better manners through his intercourse~
16 I,VI | Gaudissart," said the scullions, better pleased~with the jest than
17 I,VI | Temple, I think you had better~take a formal lease of them.
18 I,VI | partnership with him, and it is better to settle everything legally
19 I,VII| Cesarine. "I like~her--oh! better than any one else."~ ~"Derville
20 I,VII| commerce, and you will be better known through that one evening~
21 I,VII| power of the soul was never better manifested than in this
22 I,VII| ever suited Madame Cesar better than this~cherry-colored
23 I,VII| eyes of some people, it~is better to be criminal than a fool.~
24 I,I | It would have been better," said Lebas, "to have kept
25 I,I | illusions. Possibly, hope is the better half of~courage; indeed,
26 I,II | when they wanted to get the better of him for~their own purposes,
27 I,II | my skin. After all,~it is better to be shorn than killed."~ ~
28 I,III| capital won't do for us; it is~better to employ it in other ways.
29 I,III| wiser to step back for a better leap. The affair~does not
30 I,III| the bell. Enter a footman better dressed than Birotteau.~ ~"
31 I,III| other."~ ~"Well, so much the better," said Constance, in a grave
32 I,IV | glass of wine. So much the better! Du Tillet has~played me
33 I,IV | my bedroom? We shall be~better there. The clerks, though
34 I,IV | My opinion is that it is better to jump out of the window~
35 I,V | went to~see him. To get the better of that experienced judicial
36 I,V | more natural. All men can better~bear a known and definite
37 I,V | had happened: so much the better for them; they are~stronger
38 I,VI | who had managed to get the better of him, obtained notes~from
39 I,VII| sanctioned pride. I love thee better since I~know thee well.
40 I,VII| days."~ ~"That phrase is better than mine," whispered Cesar
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