Part, Chapter
1 I,I | Our shop has given us a living, but these two~discoveries
2 I,II | of "The Queen of Roses," living between Saint-Roch and~the
3 I,II | This mid-day of life, when living forces~find their equilibrium
4 I,III| true queen of roses, the living sign of the house, whom
5 I,III| under his~thumb one of those living lay-figures called in commercial
6 I,IV | a grotesque little man, living on his rents,--a~species
7 I,IV | Madame Angelique Madou, living in the Rue Perrin-Gasselin,
8 I,V | profit on the amount, and his living had~absorbed one half of
9 I,V | worthy of veneration,--the living image of~probity. In the
10 I,V | of this substance, be it living or dead, is, in my~judgment,
11 I,VI | profession, however, by living on the brains of others,
12 I,I | he went out. By dint of living so long with his cats~Molineux
13 I,III| signature,--one dead, the~other living. The cleverest among them
14 I,IV | money-matters,--my rents are my living. Without~them how could
15 I,IV | s brow, as if it were a living mark of~infamy.~ ~Birotteau
16 I,IV | name of Anselme in the only~living part of his memory,--as
17 I,V | Birotteau, merchant-perfumer, living in Paris, Rue Saint-Honore,~
18 I,VI | Popinot.~ ~"As if I were living with my own son," she answered,
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