Part, Chapter
1 I,II | was well-~disposed on this point, he made him head-clerk
2 I,II | Birotteau had~reached that point. Everything at "The Queen
3 I,II | which led from his original~point of departure. Roguin, notary
4 I,II | and~elegance of Paris. In point of fact, this Paste and
5 I,II | this crucial pause as the point of a new departure.~He did
6 I,III| supposed to be rich, was in point of fact~comparatively poor.
7 I,IV | your landlord--or, on the~point of becoming so."~ ~Birotteau
8 I,V | took my departure from~that point and got the oil of nuts,
9 I,V | air of distrust, seemed to point to some new enterprise;
10 I,V | Saint-Roch.~She had reached the point of no longer perceiving
11 I,VI | mentioned that he was on the point of departure; the~hope of
12 I,VI | nothing; we go straight to the point. That's~useful literature;
13 I,I | powers are attacked at the point where the individual temperament
14 I,II | them.~Opinions vary on this point. However that may be, Birotteau
15 I,III| royalist jackass~on the point of failure. Delighted to
16 I,IV | man, "we are coming to the point."~ ~"His ledder gif you
17 I,V | judge!~ ~"From a commercial point of view," he said, "custom
18 I,VI | failures stop short at~this point, and the reason is as follows:~ ~
19 I,VI | ranks of the nobility, is in point of fact~made up of traders
20 I,VI | of all this is, that in point of fact the debtor appoints~
21 I,VI | he might succumb. On~this point the law is precise, formal,
22 I,VI | both of whom~were eager to point out opportunities which
23 I,VII| imposing in~character; and, in point of act, it is neither dwarfed
|