Part, Chapter
1 I,I | kitchen. I~hire the first floor of the next house, and open
2 I,I | from house to~house on one floor; and we shall thus get a
3 I,I | will sleep on the second floor. On~the third will be the
4 I,I | staircase and hiring the first floor of the next~house?--which
5 I,II | appartement to the first floor. A fortunate event induced~
6 I,IV | the rich perfumer~take the floor above it, thus diminishing
7 I,IV | passage-way on the~same floor. All that costs money, and
8 I,IV | front windows on the first floor, besides the~window on the
9 I,IV | the angles, on the sixth floor for~sanitary reasons, the
10 I,IV | precious /anglaises/ on the floor above him of which he had
11 I,IV | brandishing her lance: a myth. The floor was covered with plates
12 I,IV | Think what my first floor will be worth in seven years!"
13 I,IV | She lived on the lower floor of a yellow~house, which
14 I,V | Bourdonnais on~the fourth floor of an old house.~ ~Just
15 I,V | antechamber, with a red-tiled floor, had only one~window, screened
16 I,V | furniture from~the first floor to the second floor. We
17 I,V | first floor to the second floor. We shall have, as they
18 I,V | wife slept on the second floor. Popinot's bedroom became
19 I,V | second clerk. On the third floor the furniture was~stored
20 I,VI | shops in former days; the floor paved~with large white stones,
21 I,VII| temporary~bedroom on the second floor to discuss the lease and
22 I,VII| appartement on~the first floor. Cesar had promised Raguet,
23 I,VII| take charge of the second~floor, the shop will be closed;
24 I,VII| enshrine~ourselves on the first floor."~ ~At two o'clock, on the
25 I,VII| family reached the first floor and entered an ante-chamber
26 I,VII| draperies; the~polished floor had an enticing look, which
27 I,VII| said~Molineux. "My first floor thus improved will be worth
28 I,VII| shall soon have my first floor back again; the man will
29 I,II | of the sumptuous upper floor became a dry "no" in~Adolphe'
30 I,III| chorus-singer's on a fourth floor with the appartement of
31 I,III| Petit-Bourbon-Saint-Sulpice, on the second floor of a dignified old~house,
32 I,IV | worthless, no doubt. The floor was as dirty, defaced, and~
33 I,IV | wished to sleep on the fifth floor,--"that I may not see,"
34 I,V | Gigonnet lived on the third floor of a house whose window-sashes,
35 I,V | des Plantes. On the first floor, in an evil-smelling lair,
36 I,V | were made. On the~second floor, the elegant boxes which
37 I,V | thousand francs, on a third floor of this~house, from which
38 I,VII| burned letters lying on the floor made him shudder, for~his
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