Part, Chapter
1 I,I | thousand francs worth of land Xandrot can't be a~notary,
2 I,I | money,~if the value of the land can't be realized, how will
3 I,I | the present owners of that land must be~fools to sell for
4 I,I | and not a speculator in land.~We women have instincts
5 I,II | old, owning a few acres of land, who let~Ursula marry him.~ ~
6 I,II | force of~such words in a land where every man hoped to
7 I,II | to buy the huts and the land in the Faubourg~du Temple;
8 I,III| half the purchasers of the land, while Cesar Birotteau~represented
9 I,III| the first to mention the land~speculation; his part was
10 I,V | ready to go to work, the land affair is settled.~Here,
11 I,VII| income equal to that of land); he supplied the dinner,
12 I,I | to sell again. To-day the land speculation, his share in
13 I,I | have been talking of the land affair with the judge,"
14 I,I | only on the value of the land; but architects and~contractors
15 I,I | them. The~owners of the land have not received one penny;
16 I,I | a month to get into that land speculation, but happily
17 I,I | of the price of the said land.~Now, it is enough to be
18 I,I | day came to pay for the land,~seemed to us all a matter
19 I,II | half its value, certain land about the~Madeleine--"~ ~"
20 I,III| made on the price of the land?"~ ~"One hundred and forty
21 I,III| advance for possession of the land, we should~then have had
22 I,IV | all her reverses! adorable land, where I~shall no doubt
23 I,V | bankers are the casks. That~land speculation is no doubt
24 I,V | up the price of all~the land in Paris by pouncing upon
25 I,VI | I have bought a piece of land in the Faubourg Saint-Marceau,--
26 I,VII| Saint-Martin was begun.~Land in the Faubourg du Temple
27 I,VII| thousand francs out of /your/ land, and he refuses /us/ sixty~
|