Part, Chapter
1 I,I | be our~fete,--yours and mine. Good-by to economy,--for
2 I,I | associates, as I shall to mine. The deeds of purchase are
3 I,II | himself, "Thou shalt be mine!" He had vowed not to~marry
4 I,V | General Foy was touching mine in quite another fashion
5 I,VII| wear her~china-crape like mine. The dressmaker is sure
6 I,I | hundred thousand francs of mine; therefore, my half of the~
7 I,I | share, I give bills for mine; I offer~them to you, and
8 I,I | your signature to guarantee mine? Of~course not; you would
9 I,I | in~a lawyer's hands or in mine until the day came to pay
10 I,II | his heart, "She shall be mine!"~ ~*****~ ~The following
11 I,II | profits from a discovery of mine in~perfumery. Should it
12 I,III| Nucingen.~With this letter of mine you can face the 15th of
13 I,III| hundred thousand francs of mine," said Cesar. "As to the~
14 I,IV | Mitral,~your bailiff, is mine as well; he will send you
15 I,V | you loved a daughter of mine, had she a million and you
16 I,V | only a blind. A~friend of mine, whom I sent about to learn
17 I,V | cover my carcass, but it is mine! Brigands,~thieves, my money
18 I,V | forward, "nothing here is~mine; everything belongs to my
19 I,VII| heart, just as it is dead in mine and in~Cesar's. Do you not
20 I,VII| That phrase is better than mine," whispered Cesar to Pillerault.~ ~"
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