Part, Chapter
1 I,I | hypothecating his~share. To hold the gridiron and know how
2 I,II | that~are strong enough to hold ingenuous hearts to a creature
3 I,II | evil, their itching to lay hold of all that was good to~
4 I,II | reality. As soon as he got hold~of a cabriolet he was always
5 I,III| the speculation and get hold of it as a dead~thing, which
6 I,III| yourself,~wipe your eyes, hold your heart in hand, and
7 I,V | seller of nuts, so as to get hold of the raw material,~and
8 I,V | Circumjacent, Popinot! recollect, hold fast to that," cried Cesar.~ ~"
9 I,V | a word.~ ~Some moralists hold that love is an involuntary
10 I,VI | house of Austria, jolly dog! Hold fast that you may acquire;~
11 I,VI | all, acquire that you may hold. Those are my opinions,~
12 I,I | the fire than he could lay hold of. How~would Anselme guide
13 I,I | given Popinot to make~him hold his tongue at Vauquelin'
14 I,I | artists~find in getting hold of a caricature which confirms
15 I,I | Birotteau did not expect to hold a single house upon them;
16 I,I | liable to the sellers.~I hold inflexibly to one commercial
17 I,III| at the end of~a line I'll hold for him?"~ ~Honest minds
18 I,III| galleys if the law~could get hold of him.~ ~"According to
19 I,V | trifle, a mere nothing. Hold yourself ready to make good
20 I,VI | of his insect, he had got hold of~an old commercial sphinx.~ ~"
21 I,VI | I shall sue him! I must hold on to my securities to the~
22 I,VI | fate. For a man who can hold himself above~it all, or
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