Part, Chapter
1 I,I | Birotteau should leave my bed! He has eaten so~much veal
2 I,I | have slept together in this bed, in~this house, it has never
3 I,I | guard-room. Did he come to bed to-night? Why, of course;~
4 I,I | She cast her eyes upon the bed and saw her husband's night-cap,
5 I,I | opened at the foot of her bed. At last she~cried "Birotteau!"
6 I,I | where her daughter was in bed.~ ~"Cesarine is asleep,"
7 I,I | before fortune.~Come, go to bed, dear friend, there is no
8 I,I | we shall~talk better in bed, if it amuses you. Oh! that
9 I,II | as~Ferdinand was going to bed, Birotteau took him into
10 I,II | of it. We will~not go to bed till we have found where
11 I,III| noiselessly, leaving his wife in bed, dressed quickly, and went
12 I,IV | and, finally, a chilly bed that might formerly have~
13 I,VI | straw matting near your bed."~ ~"Permit me, monsieur,"
14 I,VII| study.~ ~"Here I have put a bed," said Grindot, opening
15 I,VII| mirror door, a chaste little bed with simple~curtains, and
16 I,VII| Birotteau found upon her bed (where~Virginie had just
17 I,I | entreated Cesar to go to bed, and they sent for~his old
18 I,I | Cesarine, as Cesar rose~up in bed and recited clauses of the
19 I,I | took her husband's place in~bed.~ ~"Poor woman!" said Cesar,
20 I,II | asleep in the sumptuous bed, Birotteau would~rise to
21 I,III| for we don't always go to bed," said Popinot. "We must
22 I,IV | its fooleries.~Lying in bed, in a sort of oblong recess
23 I,IV | together the curtains of the bed with a haste which~made
24 I,V | the clerks~have gone to bed, and spare you the agony
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