Part, Chapter
1 I,II | honor of fighting against Napoleon on the~steps of Saint-Roch,
2 I,II | brilliant as the prospects of Napoleon~might seem. At first the
3 I,II | but he was cashiered by Napoleon, who,~according to Birotteau,
4 I,II | advantage at the time when Napoleon~conscripted all families
5 I,II | word of command. In 1815~Napoleon, always his enemy, dismissed
6 I,II | the one hand to cheapen~Napoleon's order by lavishing the
7 I,II | up in one idea. Troy and Napoleon are but poems. May~this
8 I,IV | where I was wounded by Napoleon. These claims--"~ ~Constance,
9 I,V | where I was~wounded by Napoleon. My wife gives a ball, three
10 I,V | I give you my word~that Napoleon, called emperor, wounded
11 I,VI | where~I was wounded by Napoleon. Come to the ball, and bring
12 I,VI | with a gesture worthy of Napoleon, his idol.~ ~"Thank you,
13 I,VII| where I was wounded by~Napoleon. May I not hope that you
14 I,VII| Birotteau, like the Emperor Napoleon at Compiegne,~when the chateau
15 I,I | Feeble beings have the colic. Napoleon slept.~Before assailing
16 I,II | look. This imitation of Napoleon's~glance was a silly satire,
17 I,III| hand to the adversary of Napoleon, wounded at Saint-Roch.
18 I,IV | according to Nucingen, the Napoleon~of finance; commerce by
|