Part, Chapter
1 I,II | more because he compiled a prospectus whose~ridiculous phraseology
2 I,II | difficulty, a copy of this prospectus at the~establishment of
3 I,V | life, and I am lost! my prospectus will be ridiculous. You
4 I,VI | commerce. Famous! As for your prospectus, I'll take~charge of that.
5 I,VI | was keeping to pay for the prospectus, "I--"~ ~"I--" cried Gaudissart,
6 I,VI | get to the bottom of the prospectus;~then we can drink without
7 I,VI | Monsieur," said Popinot, "a prospectus is often a fortune."~ ~"
8 I,VI | fortune is nothing~more than a prospectus."~ ~"Ha, very good!" cried
9 I,VI | impatiently.~ ~Here follows the prospectus; the same which the trade
10 I,VI | congratulate you."~ ~"A noble prospectus!" cried Popinot, enthusiastically.~ ~"
11 I,VI | enthusiastically.~ ~"A prospectus which slays Macassar at
12 I,VI | have just been studying a prospectus~for his oil; you see before
13 I,VI | before you the author of that prospectus, which~seems to us the finest
14 I,VI | palm of the~author of the prospectus.~ ~The judge had a coach
15 I,VII| he wrote the~beautiful prospectus for the oil."~ ~"He believes
16 I,II | a fine impression of the prospectus on vellum, at~the top of
17 I,III| gilt frames, copies of the prospectus. One hundred~thousand bottles
18 I,IV | the language of his own prospectus, he enjoyed a sanguine~temperament,
19 I,IV | let us go to work:~write a prospectus! Down with humbug!' On that
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