Part, Chapter
1 I,I | Syria!~Livingston has just set up for me a hydraulic press
2 I,II | by the distinctions they set up among the~temperaments.
3 I,II | tell us~of the past, which set a seal upon the caprices
4 I,III| other Parisian husbands he set up a private~establishment
5 I,III| fact~comparatively poor. He set a watch on the notary, wormed
6 I,III| Tillet now~made a banker, who set on foot and directed vast
7 I,IV | the whole judicial array set in motion with the~rapidity
8 I,V | by an upholsterer, had a set of furniture with~arched
9 I,V | Popinot and~Company, as to set a trap for his daughter,
10 I,V | indifferent.~ ~"He is to set up for himself in the Rue
11 I,V | fellow, what a day! I am set up in business,~and Monsieur
12 I,VII| fastened with a bluish cameo~set as a pin; he wore short
13 I,I | that is sufficient to set aside the agreement."~ ~"
14 I,I | floodgates du Tillet had set wide open when he turned
15 I,II | hundred francs income, I could set~aside four thousand francs
16 I,II | threshold of his~door, and set a watch on all around him.
17 I,II | universe. Birotteau had not set foot in his manufactory
18 I,III| tiger, about a thumb high, set out a table, which Birotteau~
19 I,III| away like a man suddenly~set at liberty, though he felt
20 I,III| count for something.~I have set your diamond well."~ ~"How
21 I,III| grand scale. If you had set foot in~the faubourg, where
22 I,IV | little Popinot, who has set up for himself?" he added,
23 I,V | notes, and~believes that you set him up in business expressly
24 I,V | interrupting Mongenod. "If he~had set up his own Cephalic Oil
25 I,VI | people. This~personage, set up in the drama like the
26 I,VII| appartement, where he has never set foot, and~where all the
|