Part, Chapter
1 I,I | answered the perfumer, coming into the~bedroom.~ ~"Come
2 I,I | blinds, and I often see~him coming home in the mornings: where
3 I,II | man knew to~be useless. In coming and going about the desk
4 I,II | included Birotteau in the coming~promotion. This honor, which
5 I,II | employment of the time spent in coming and going, in making~proposals,
6 I,II | old~Madonna; for amid the coming ruin she retained her gentle
7 I,VI | activity were to win him, in coming years, the title of~The
8 I,VI | book," cried Birotteau.~ ~"Coming down the Rue Aubry-le-Boucher,
9 I,VI | and the vanities; he is coming, the innocent boy, armed
10 I,VII| accepted my invitation. He is coming~with Monsieur Vauquelin.
11 I,VII| this moment Grindot was coming downstairs with Braschon.
12 I,VII| and a poor peasant~lad coming from Touraine to Paris with
13 I,I | Xandrot to himself, "he is coming to. I thought him lost."~ ~
14 I,I | not expect reproaches in coming here, for, thinking this~
15 I,II | I do not meet a soldier coming home from Saint-Roch, my
16 I,II | Paris. No one could avoid coming~face to face with Cephalic
17 I,II | s eyes are opened. He is coming round to us."~ ~"We will
18 I,III| I feared you were never coming," he said respectfully.~ ~
19 I,IV | thought the poor man, "we are coming to the point."~ ~"His ledder
20 I,IV | Are the chimney-bricks coming down on my head?" exclaimed
21 I,IV | daughter, I see a failure coming. If your father is forced
22 I,V | Workmen were continually coming and going. The stairs were
23 I,V | down, madame!" said Cesar, coming forward, "nothing here is~
24 I,VI | the creditors, worn out~by coming and going, by the marches
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