Part, Chapter
1 I,II | leaves at his ease,~he read a note by the author which explained
2 I,II | called eccentricities. If a note were overdue he sent for
3 I,IV | the wall."~ ~"Send me a note this evening," said the
4 I,IV | yard, "I would like your note~at forty days, because I
5 I,I | the painter to take~the note given to Grindot, ridiculing
6 I,I | merchant takes back his note, and does not offer it~elsewhere.
7 I,I | the forty thousand on his note to~Roguin's client, which
8 I,III| you money on your simple note. I have made an~honorable
9 I,III| ten thousand francs, and a note of hand for~that amount,
10 I,III| returned, and~Cesar signed the note, and felt the ten bank-notes
11 I,III| write down, 'Last~of March, note for ten thousand francs,
12 I,IV | his~request.~ ~"Renew a note for twelve hundred francs?"
13 I,IV | days.~ ~"You must give me a note for fifty thousand francs
14 I,IV | part of his memory,--as the note of a piano lifts the hammer~
15 I,V | like a magpie, to renew a note of~twelve hundred francs!--
16 I,V | as he did so, a Treasury~note. "I was sure of him, poor
17 I,V | Birotteau, picking up~the note and continuing to read,
18 I,V | which I send herewith, in a note~of the Receiver-General
19 I,V | him have them on his own note without~security. But he
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