Part, Chapter
1 I,I | through the wall. I turn the staircase so as to pass from house
2 I,I | told you~about turning the staircase and hiring the first floor
3 I,IV | Moreover, I have to turn my~staircase, and make a new landing,
4 I,IV | besides the~window on the staircase which lights the landing;
5 I,IV | next house, by~turning the staircase, so as to open a way from
6 I,IV | you must light the new staircase from above,~and manage to
7 I,IV | you shall have a~charming staircase, lighted from above, with
8 I,IV | bad lives, and made the~staircase intolerable,--conduct worthy
9 I,IV | close~up the door on my staircase (where you are to have no
10 I,V | passage, from which the staircase,~taken out of a corner of
11 I,VI | necessitated by the change~of the staircase, the square wooden funnels
12 I,VI | headlong to~the little dark staircase, as much to tell Raguet
13 I,VII| end of the vestibule the staircase~went up in two straight
14 I,VII| and was entered from the staircase; it was~treated in the style
15 I,VII| who followed them to the staircase, vainly~entreating them
16 I,I | Cesarine followed him to the staircase, and asked for~directions
17 I,II | who rushed in~from the staircase with the violence of a waterspout.~ ~"
18 I,IV | himself as he went up a~superb staircase banked with flowers, and
19 I,IV | baron was already on the staircase, and~Birotteau caught him
20 I,IV | went up the dirty, tortuous staircase which he once trod so proudly.~
21 I,IV | upon him, rushed~down the staircase and into the street, but
22 I,V | who commonly went up the~staircase of Bidault called Gigonnet,--
23 I,V | the middle, on pivots. The~staircase opened directly upon the
24 I,V | was lighted only from the staircase.~All the lodgers, with the
25 I,V | Cesar went up the~grand staircase of the Hotel de Lenoncourt,
26 I,VII| have been executed. The~staircase opens above into an enormous
27 I,VII| and saw at the foot of the staircase (still new as~he had left
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