Part, Chapter
1 I,I | light in the~room beyond her chamber, and thought of fire; but
2 I,I | boudoir for you and a pretty chamber for Cesarine. The~shop-girl
3 I,II | hundred francs, now had a chamber where he could put away,
4 I,IV | worsted velvet. As~to the chamber of the old celibate it was
5 I,VI | like a messenger of the~Chamber of Peers, or an usher of
6 I,VI | right side of~them; for the Chamber,--oh, monsieur, the Chamber
7 I,VI | Chamber,--oh, monsieur, the Chamber does us all the harm~in
8 I,VI | it? there's Keller in the Chamber: now Francois Keller is~
9 I,VI | No, no; it was in the Chamber."~ ~"In the Chamber? was
10 I,VI | the Chamber."~ ~"In the Chamber? was it Monsieur de la Billardiere?"
11 I,I | If I ever get into the Chamber of Deputies, and ever have
12 I,I | and the president of the chamber of notaries was~summoned.
13 I,II | being always returned to the~Chamber as a deputy of Paris.~ ~
14 I,II | will go together to the Chamber," said the banker, striking
15 I,II | the budget, piles of the~Chamber records, open volumes of
16 I,II | on my shoulders, and the Chamber takes all my~time,--you
17 I,II | see you before you go the Chamber," she said.~ ~"It is two
18 I,III| for a loan proposed in~the Chamber, and they begged Monsieur
19 I,IV | met in council,--regular Chamber; but we all agreed like
20 I,IV | themselves in Cesarine's chamber.~ ~"Now I can get a loan!"
21 I,IV | on the~peristyle of the Chamber of Deputies, Pillerault--
22 I,V | to live in the wretched chamber looking into a~damp, dark
23 I,V | economy;~you shall have my chamber, and share my bread. I have
24 I,VII| had doubtless~gone to her chamber. Anselme and Constance lived
25 I,VII| him in the solemn audience chamber, where about a dozen~members
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