Part, Chapter
1 I,II | II~A glance rapidly thrown over the
2 I,II | With one~comprehensive glance of hatred he had taken in
3 I,II | crude or acrid color. The glance of his eye, whose iris~was
4 I,II | alarming because the limpid glance of his frank blue~eyes harmonized
5 I,II | her pure though saddened glance; and no one ever thought
6 I,III| He had sometimes caught a glance of dignified~approval from
7 I,IV | been dressing; her first glance cut short Cesar's~eloquence
8 I,IV | Cayron, and giving him a glance and a smile intended to~
9 I,IV | resumed Molineux with a glance at the umbrella-merchant,~"
10 I,V | What a great man! what a glance, what penetration!" said
11 I,V | diplomatically exchanged, the~glance full of hope which Popinot
12 I,V | crudely; she gave a bird's-eye glance at the harvest of~love in
13 I,V | watch the effect her own glance had upon~them, as they lighted
14 I,VI | unwearied memory, and~a glance that guessed the wants of
15 I,VI | toy with your snuff-box, glance often at your feet, and~
16 I,VII| murmurs were checked by a glance from the chevalier Birotteau.~ ~"
17 I,VII| receiving a solemnly frigid~glance from the promoted commercial
18 I,II | imitation of Napoleon's~glance was a silly satire, then
19 I,II | coin of their emperor. This glance fell~upon Birotteau, a devotee
20 I,III| could not misunderstand the glance, which wrapped her, as it
21 I,V | years; and then his anxious~glance fell upon the chimney-piece,
22 I,V | shuddered under his rasping glance. The~lower classes will
23 I,VII| handwriting he~recognized at a glance. A lighted candle, and the
24 I,VII| Tillet, with a stealthy glance.~ ~"Poor!" exclaimed the
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