Part, Chapter
1 I,I | Birotteau, do you know what I am thinking of as I listen to~you? You
2 I,II | prevented Birotteau~from thinking of her defects, which moreover
3 I,II | in the choice of means,~thinking all equally good, he was
4 I,IV | returning from Rome and thinking himself a Fontaine or a
5 I,V | his uncle's appartement, thinking as he went that the~old
6 I,V | for its~weight in gold, thinking that it preserves the hair:
7 I,V | people~in the world who are thinking of me.'"~ ~"I accept," said
8 I,VI | labyrinth of the great market, thinking how to achieve a~rapid success,
9 I,VI | idler; but he~is not; he is thinking and studying all the time
10 I,VII| and they all went to sleep thinking of the joys of the morrow.~ ~
11 I,I | the windows of his shop, thinking over the~expansion of his
12 I,I | reproaches in coming here, for, thinking this~twenty-five thousand
13 I,III| people of another way of thinking from his own, men who were
14 I,III| ruin the establishment, thinking that~it was all his doing.
15 I,IV | it mit him."~ ~Birotteau, thinking that de Marsay might have
16 I,IV | the~perfumer's ball, and thinking to make him a return and
17 I,IV | purest innocence. Claparon, thinking~himself very clever, pressed
18 I,VI | difference. It was, to his~thinking and to that of Ragon, as
19 I,VI | might have taken~without thinking himself less than honest.
20 I,VII| without perceiving them, thinking probably that they were
21 I,VII| manifesting a joy at which people thinking~themselves superior might
22 I,VII| Birotteau came in he was thinking over~the best means of accomplishing
|