Part, Chapter
1 I,I | Cesar, you are going into a thing without Roguin; therefore
2 I,I | Then why is he doing a thing forbidden by law? How do
3 I,I | years it will be~another thing; just so with stocks. Know
4 I,I | and who could~say--if the thing were possible without offence
5 I,I | He knows that I know a thing about him which~was not
6 I,I | for I guessed just how the thing~was done. If you had sent
7 I,III| good as another's; but the thing is, I've been honest,--~/
8 I,III| get hold of it as a dead~thing, which he might galvanize
9 I,IV | my architect can do the thing at all. He told me that
10 I,IV | But of~what value is the thing they call in Paris /mind/
11 I,V | should I give it up? The thing is good; though it may be
12 I,VI | of the bottles.~From one thing to another, I trapped the
13 I,VI | Greeks and Romans, knew~a thing or two, and were not so
14 I,I | terror seized him: such a thing had never happened~throughout
15 I,I | thought I was getting a good~thing!--and paid a hundred thousand
16 I,I | functionary it is quite another thing! He won't~palaver; he'll
17 I,III| think you have~got a good thing, and close it the moment
18 I,IV | Madeleine to us?--a midge of a thing.~Pr-r-r! We don't play low,
19 I,IV | genius has found a good~thing, the moneyed man taps him
20 I,IV | Permit me only to ask you one thing. Will this sum clear~you
21 I,VI | Although, as a general~thing, all creditors are cheated,
22 I,VI | terrible hurry; as a general thing he is silent. Let~us, however,
23 I,VII| Ah, that's another thing! Sit down, Monsieur Birotteau,
24 I,VII| that~brigand? The whole thing is extraordinary."~ ~Popinot
25 I,VII| interests. It is a rare thing~nowadays to find men who
26 I,VII| said Pillerault. "Such a thing can never~happen to you."~ ~"
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