Part, Chapter
1 I,II | the~shop was closed, the street quiet, the accounts regulated,
2 I,IV | house to the other~on the street side."~ ~"You have understood
3 I,IV | vestibule~opening from the street, and in the space under
4 I,V | said, as they reached the street where~Monsieur Vauquelin
5 I,V | perfumer, when he got into the~street. "He comes to my house!
6 I,VI | the carts stationed in the street. The sight of men~working
7 I,VI | idlers and busybodies in the street; gossip, based on~these
8 I,VI | habit of going through the~street holding his hat in his hand.
9 I,VI | Cinq-Diamants. This narrow little street, where loaded~wagons can
10 I,VI | Popinot's choice of the little street a good one. The house, which~
11 I,VI | other rooms lighted from the street, in which Popinot proposed~
12 I,VI | coach at the end of the street, in which he carried~off
13 I,VII| re-entered the house from the street. The entrance had~been remodelled
14 I,VII| with three windows on the street, in white and red, with~
15 I,I | a figure appeared in the street~for which he felt a violent
16 I,I | discomposed. At the corner of a street he ran against~Alexandre
17 I,I | the name of Cesar into a street coach, not without great
18 I,IV | led his nephew into the street~and forced him, in his shirt-sleeves
19 I,IV | the staircase and into the street, but Birotteau was out of~
20 I,V | The Rue Grenetat is a street where all the houses, crowded
21 I,V | opened directly upon the street. The porter's lodge was
22 I,VII| hundred carriages in the street."~ ~"I was there; and he
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