Part, Chapter
1 I,I | territory. Let us show a true patriotism which shall put
2 I,I | The Queen of Roses,' your true glory? Leave ambition to~
3 I,I | gets burned,--isn't that~true? Politics burn in these
4 I,II | business. Moreover, like~a true perfumer, he hated the revolution
5 I,II | honorable feelings; he is true as~gold, and as good as
6 I,II | possessed of patience and true courage.~ ~Thus it happened
7 I,II | good name she~shared. It is true that she sometimes asked
8 I,II | said Ferdinand.~ ~"That is true," said Birotteau, bewildered
9 I,III| suddenly of Cesarine,~the true queen of roses, the living
10 I,III| on devotion.~ ~"He is a true merchant; he will succeed,"
11 I,IV | which is ready."~ ~"That's true. My neighbor," he said to
12 I,IV | establishment which kept the true filbert of Provence, and
13 I,V | Integrity, a sense of duty, and true modesty made, as it~were,
14 I,V | for--"~ ~"Commerce; that is true, my boy."~ ~Cesar's triumphant
15 I,V | thousand francs."~ ~"That is true, wife," said Cesar, with
16 I,V | love, it is none the~less true that all sympathy, moral
17 I,V | seeing his cashier. "Ah,~true, he does not sleep here
18 I,V | my children, it is all true. I have been decorated.
19 I,VI | Behold! behold!~A Frenchman true!"~ ~"Come and talk with
20 I,VI | you are a deep one--"~ ~"True, I have some experience
21 I,VII| Bourbons on the steps--"~ ~"True," said the judge.~ ~"--of
22 I,VII| of his~face was that of a true philosopher. The men were
23 I,I | sheer necessity."~ ~"That's true," said Pillerault.~ ~"If
24 I,II | cup of coffee.~ ~"Here is true wisdom," thought Birotteau,
25 I,II | great enterprise.~ ~"Ah, true! the lands about the Madeleine."~ ~
26 I,III| cried Cesar, "can it be true? you are not joking with
27 I,III| France herself."~ ~"That is true," cried Birotteau. "My son,
28 I,IV | eyeglass, and said, "Ah! true, I thought the face~was
29 I,IV | on the~15th."~ ~"That's true; I am half-asleep still."~ ~
30 I,V | it teaches~us to know our true friends."~ ~The daughter
31 I,V | belonged to~the small number of true gentlemen whom the preceding
32 I,V | a nature must needs~be true. Constance was a woman essentially
33 I,V | was a woman essentially true.~ ~The question was, how
34 I,VI | much the dividends of the true creditors, and~laying up
35 I,VI | legal and illegal, false and true, honest and dishonest.~A
36 I,VI | sense held it up to its true light as a magnificent~supererogation
37 I,VII| sorrows; his heart was so true that they were to him a
38 I,VII| with interest."~ ~"Is that true?"~ ~"Be there at eleven
39 I,VII| his poor nephew.~ ~"It is true," he said, "they would be
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