Part, Chapter
1 I,II | Perhaps you took something on account of~your salary?"~ ~Du Tillet
2 I,II | and found that his clerk's account had not been~debited.~ ~"
3 I,III| they could turn to~good account a portion of the deposits,
4 I,IV | Celestin will make out the account. Be~ready at eleven, will
5 I,V | refuse him point-blank, on account of his~relations. Celestin
6 I,VI | light, though of little account themselves.~ ~"Well, Birotteau,"
7 I,VI | are to negotiate on his account with the newspapers. But
8 I,I | major-domo brought in Chevet's account,~followed by a clerk sent
9 I,I | cheque, "will you certify my account? You need~only to add it
10 I,I | the back~of the shop, "my account has been examined, audited,
11 I,I | to~pay, each on his own account, our half of the price of
12 I,I | which I will send~you an account; there will be a small amount
13 I,III| it be if it had to take account~of the business of every
14 I,III| situation~to his wife, for the account with du Tillet needed an
15 I,III| counter, examining~the expense account, and no doubt counting up
16 I,III| can tell you. On my~own account, I have made, in the last
17 I,V | have not come on your own account," said Gigonnet,~"but on
18 I,V | once. I will send you the account to-morrow morning."~ ~Madame
19 I,VI | it to his profit-and-loss~account, and does not commit the
20 I,VI | commissioner is to be taken into account."~ ~"Monsieur," said Molineux, "
21 I,VII| waiting for a guardianship~account."~ ~"Your wife and daughter
22 I,VII| loss I put it to~my own account. We can only belong to one
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