Part, Chapter
1 I,I | the /entresol/ I place the~office, the counting-room, and
2 I,I | of which he~has been in office? A notary of Paris! he would
3 I,II | During his whole period in office he contrived to use language~
4 I,II | parish to that of the mayor's office; and he obtained~permission
5 I,V | knowledge acquired in a~lawyer's office, had an air and manner that
6 I,VI | to please the powers in office, or a rabid royalist, would~
7 I,VI | Popinot proposed~to put his office, his books, and his own
8 I,II | man in livery, towards an office far less sumptuous but more
9 I,IV | Birotteau got as far as the office of the banker, where the~
10 I,IV | truth, Claparon's private office. Between the~ostentatious
11 I,IV | from the~farther end of the office, and where the habits of
12 I,V | situation in the Sinking-fund Office, with a~salary of two thousand
13 I,V | it is~but a step to your office in the Rue de l'Oratoire."~ ~"
14 I,VI | angry creditors,--a~double office, which might be nobly magnified
15 I,VI | man could not enter the~office of Monsieur Camusot--which
16 I,VI | Constance sitting~in a little office in the damp, dark /entresol/
17 I,VII| appeal.~ ~"To be at his office this morning at half past
18 I,VII| called at the Sinking-~Fund Office to find him. They walked
19 I,VII| deposited by Derville at the office of the /procureur-general/
20 I,VII| rose. In the name of his office this~public prosecutor,
21 I,VII| the~steps of Saint-Roch an office where he might earn his
22 I,VII| bread. The~salary of that office the bankrupt laid by for
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