Part, Chapter
1 I,I | and two dairies, which bring in a~thousand crowns a year,
2 I,I | the value which it will bring three years from now, at~
3 I,II | complain of their husbands and bring them~into discredit.~ ~*****~ ~
4 I,II | life whose chances might bring him to~the scaffold, to
5 I,IV | with those of other men, to bring it~fully out. Like all Parisians,
6 I,V | are wood-yards which will bring in a~rent. We can't really
7 I,V | physicians. As for~the exterior, bring on your cosmetics."~ ~"Monsieur,"
8 I,VI | Napoleon. Come to the ball, and bring your wife and~daughter."~ ~"
9 I,VI | down."~ ~"Why did you not bring your nephew?" said Pillerault
10 I,VII| wife is well enough I will bring~her."~ ~"Xandrot," said
11 I,VII| acquaintances were~enormous. Honors bring sycophants; and there was
12 I,I | who just~then came in to bring his bill.~ ~"A merchant
13 I,I | Cesarine hastened to bring her father a little table
14 I,I | two days before he could bring himself~to seek his uncle;
15 I,III| Cesar.~ ~"Monsieur Legras, bring me ten thousand francs,
16 I,III| original project,~and vowed to bring that virtue low, to trample
17 I,IV | for a large amount?"~ ~"Bring me his acceptances for fifty
18 I,V | while a clerk was sent to~bring the Abbe Loraux, before
19 I,V | fire, too! Marie-Jeanne, bring~my clogs and my rabbit-skin
20 I,V | do not~raise a mob, and bring a crowd upon us!"~ ~"Hey!
21 I,VI | he was therefore able to bring them under~the reduction
22 I,VI | iron, wood, and copper will bring about three hundred~thousand
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