Part, Chapter
1 I,III| Anselme Popinot was a little~fellow and club-footed,--an infirmity
2 I,IV | accordance therewith, the old fellow made no repairs:~no chimney
3 I,IV | like a glove," said the old fellow with a sour~smile; "but
4 I,IV | your nuts?"~ ~"For you, old fellow, twenty-five francs a hundred,
5 I,V | prophet, and Courier a worthy fellow. He had indeed some~noble
6 I,V | should love~a poor lame fellow with red hair. Yet this
7 I,V | Oh, what a day! my dear fellow, what a day! I am set up
8 I,V | Cesarine,~and, as the old fellow is pretty clever, he gets
9 I,VI | you will find him a good fellow, with no pretension," said~
10 I,VI | A stout, chubby-faced fellow of medium height, from head
11 I,VII| asked Crottat.~ ~"My dear fellow, Birotteau is going to spend
12 I,III| beating round the bush, old fellow," thought du Tillet, and~
13 I,III| business, du Tillet. Dear fellow, you~might get me a credit
14 I,IV | governments. I'm a good fellow when I've~got my pockets
15 I,IV | don't play low, my good fellow," he said, tapping Birotteau~
16 I,IV | now. Don't be worried, old fellow,~all will go well. Pay up
17 I,IV | he is followed by~a jolly fellow, a moneyed man, who listens
18 I,IV | the fiery furnace, my good fellow,~and you haven't the loins
19 I,IV | find me a jovial, jolly fellow. French~joviality--gaiety
20 I,IV | I~say, you are a funny fellow, old man, to flash us a
21 I,V | for my part I pity the fellow as~I do a dog with a broken
22 I,V | To-morrow morning, then, old~fellow!" she said to the retired
23 I,VII| red-head. He's a nice young fellow; he lets me~earn a fair
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