Part, Chapter
1 I,III| in it, and possessed of~a rare sort of honor, that of keeping
2 I,IV | picture of the elasticity, so rare in~Paris, that fills and
3 I,IV | such~subjects of complaint rare, he had finally turned upon
4 I,VI | Aubry-le-Boucher, upon a~rare chance, and one of good
5 I,VII| sees a long perspective of rare palaces where beings of
6 I,VII| psychical history of that rare moment in~the glorious finale
7 I,IV | me in my prosperity; very rare, that."~ ~Birotteau, overcome
8 I,V | queen's boudoir; but these rare vases were flanked by two
9 I,VI | admitted~this failure to be a rare commercial wonder, seldom
10 I,VI | pleasure to witness a deed so rare in~Paris."~ ~Pillerault,
11 I,VI | eager to do honor to his rare virtue. Cesar preferred
12 I,VII| through the markets. Ha! it's rare, rare!"~ ~The worthy man
13 I,VII| markets. Ha! it's rare, rare!"~ ~The worthy man had much
14 I,VII| Majesty, touched by such rare conduct, and hearing that
15 I,VII| actuated poor Cesar is so rare in Paris that his~conduct
16 I,VII| of rehabilitation are so rare in the bankrupt court of
17 I,VII| eager interests. It is a rare thing~nowadays to find men
18 I,VII| exhibitions of character are so~rare in this Court that we cannot
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