Part, Chapter
1 I,III| caressing hopes. He now walked beside~Cesar, heaving with
2 I,III| Tuileries Gardens, Birotteau walked on to meet the~notary. Anselme
3 I,IV | windmills of Montmartre as he walked among~the gutters on the
4 I,VII| Cesarine, who thought all men walked ungracefully if they stood~
5 I,I | the grass~somewhere."~ ~He walked along the Rue Saint-Honore,
6 I,I | succor elsewhere.~But as he walked down the Rue Saint-Honore
7 I,II | thought Birotteau, as he walked away, "I see what it means.~
8 I,III| relieved of a heavy weight, walked away like a man suddenly~
9 I,IV | Bourse.~ ~Cesar, who once walked the streets of Paris with
10 I,IV | where he was~going. As he walked along the boulevards and
11 I,IV | bareheaded, to listen as they~walked towards the Rue des Lombards. "
12 I,IV | mark of~infamy.~ ~Birotteau walked to the door, and went out.
13 I,V | rubbing his~hands as he walked away. "Du Tillet will be
14 I,V | find Joseph Lebas. As she walked along she met Madame~Roguin
15 I,V | part of their lives. They~walked in silence to the Rue des
16 I,VI | his wife and daughter. He walked the streets with a bowed
17 I,VII| were to him a fortune. He~walked forward almost joyously
18 I,VII| Office to find him. They walked out together into the little~
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