1792-bluei | blund-consi | conso-earne | earns-gentl | gentr-irrep | irres-mucus | mud-prete | prett-saute | sauve-super | suppe-waite | waiti-ztit
bold = Main text
Part, Chapter grey = Comment text
2506 I,I | trouble in seducing him. The~irresistible argument and threat, fully
2507 I,III| Cesar would have wounded irretrievably any other man~than little
2508 I,VI | he~would probably have irritated Molineux, and the matter
2509 I,IV | in the mass but fierce in isolated circumstances, hard as a
2510 I,V | foresees that Popinot will issue notes, and~believes that
2511 I,VI | bulb~from which the hair issues from all deteriorating atmospheric~
2512 I,V | many such notes you are issuing;~every one expects you to
2513 I,IV | You see all der vorld ist inderesded."~ ~"Will Monsieur
2514 I,V | establishment in the quartier~des Italiens. Cesarine was put in charge
2515 I,VI | ll boil that oil; my feet itch, and my tongue too. I've
2516 I,II | in skirting evil, their itching to lay hold of all that
2517 I,II | little facts and ready-made items kept on hand. At that~hour
2518 I,II | brushing~against piles of ivory in the rough, he mounts
2519 I,VI | commercial carcass to the little~jackal, that he might torment it
2520 I,III| banker's eyes as a royalist jackass~on the point of failure.
2521 I,II | flowered waistcoat, a peasant's jacket, three coarse~shirts of
2522 I,VI | rouge never stuck, were jaded by excesses, his lips clammy,~
2523 I,IV | canary, suspicious as a jailer, but apt to put his money~
2524 I,IV | ringing in his ears, and every jangle woke~a memory of the stern
2525 I,VI | his thoughts clashed and~jangled with his speech. But these
2526 I,II | clash of bells which misery jangles in~the ears of its victims,
2527 I,V | hour of four o'clock in the~Jardin des Plantes. On the first
2528 I,V | their amusements,--a~country jaunt, the opera, the Montagnes-Beaujon, /
2529 I,II | followed by the theatre, Sunday jaunts to the~country in hackney-coaches.
2530 Add | Gaudissart the Great~ ~Gobseck, Jean-Esther Van~Gobseck~Father Goriot~
2531 I,VI | Felix Gaudissart, son of Jean-Francois~Gaudissart, grandson of
2532 I,VII| Bossuet, Racine,~Voltaire, Jean-Jacques Rousseau, Montesquieu, Moliere,
2533 Add | Life~Cousin Pons~ ~Cardot, Jean-Jerome-Severin~A Start in Life~Lost Illusions~
2534 Add | Ball at Sceaux~ ~Popinot, Jean-Jules~Honorine~The Commission
2535 I,III| dinners were much~prized. Jeannette, the old cook, took care
2536 I,V | the~10th of October, who jeered her best customers and was
2537 I,II | to recant them, under the jeering plaudits of a~foolish crowd
2538 I,V | put large sums of money in jeopardy. He~dealt in cast-iron chimney
2539 I,VI | a farm!"~ ~Poor Cesar's jeremiads made no impression upon
2540 I,III| Roguin!" said du Tillet, jestingly, "don't you call that a~
2541 I,V | stability were endangered by the Jesuits, whose~secret power was
2542 I,VII| an antique lamp with four jets. The~architect had combined
2543 I,VI | Constance had left her~modest jewel-case. This touching obedience
2544 I,VII| her. Monsieur~Curel, the jeweller, colonel of the National
2545 I,VII| from which~hung a pound of jingling gew-gaws, and by a green
2546 I,VII| short sleeves~made with jockeys: her beautiful arms, still
2547 I,VII| of its native powers of jocose silliness. It was a~fair
2548 I,I | naked as~the little Saint John; and then, as they can't
2549 I,VII| women, who good-naturedly join in the last quadrille and~
2550 I,I | Now, it is enough to be jointly and separately liable to
2551 I,IV | the floors firm on their joists, the paint~satisfactory;
2552 I,VI | Gaudissart poured out a series of jokes and puns upon hats and heads,~
2553 I,IV | so brutal in his coarse jollity,~and he had felt the man'
2554 I,I | Know then, Constance-Barbe-~Josephine Pillerault, that you will
2555 I,VI | interests which~cross and jostle each other. A usual and
2556 I,II | battalions into the arena of~journalism, for which they have created--
2557 I,II | the genius~to comprehend journalistic influence and the suction
2558 I,VI | and Popinot, helped by a journeyman~whose services the commercial
2559 I,V | Nucingen to du Tillet, "you haf joust~missed blaying me a bretty
2560 I,IV | jovial, jolly fellow. French~joviality--gaiety and gravity, all
2561 I,VII| He~walked forward almost joyously to /their/ tree, which by
2562 I,VII| president rose to~pronounce judgement.~ ~"The Court," he said,
2563 I,IV | little brown earthenware jug from~which, every now and
2564 I,VI | It's the very place to juggle a--I mean to settle a~piece
2565 I,I | disappeared."~ ~"I hope I'm not juggled out of five thousand francs,"
2566 I,III| the debts, and that~clever juggler had laid bare to him the
2567 I,II | perfect equilibrium of the juices of life, which tends to~
2568 I,VI | the great kerchief~/a la Julie/ which Madame Ragon wore.~ ~"
2569 I,III| in elegant morning dress jumped~lightly down, throwing the
2570 I,V | pray that at~this painful juncture God will be pleased to preserve
2571 I,II | overpowering effect. On a fine June day, crossing~by the Pont-Marie
2572 I,VII| Du Tillet, Roguin, Cardot junior,~the Comte de Grandville,
2573 I,VI | arbiter of his~fate,--a legal Jupiter. He meant to frighten him
2574 I,VI | present day (another /piece justificative/):--~ ~ ~GOLD MEDAL EXPOSITION
2575 I,II | historians call /pieces justificatives/. We give it here:~ ~THE
2576 I,II | from those about him, and justifying such demands on the~theory
2577 I,VI | hollowed like that of a Kalmuc~Tartar, bobbed from right
2578 I,VI | memorial to his Highness,~the Keeper of the Seals, relating to
2579 I,I | like a poor~dog in his kennel. Isn't it much better to
2580 I,VI | tight sleeves, and the great kerchief~/a la Julie/ which Madame
2581 I,VI | which strayed upon~their kerchiefs, will doubtless remember.~ ~
2582 I,V | gridirons, coarse fire-dogs, kettles~and boilers in cast or wrought
2583 I,IV | him of which he had the key;~they belonged to him, he
2584 I,II | to take, on occasion, the key-note of the various~societies
2585 I,I | shopkeeping; the best of our kidney are in it.~After selling
2586 I,IV | white wine, and vulgar kidneys, /sautes au vin de champagne/,~
2587 I,IV | no credit; that is what kills us little~retailers."~ ~"
2588 I,II | stir of this intellectual kiln, where the daily~bread of
2589 I,III| virtuous~recognition,--by the kind-heartedness, as it were, of his own~
2590 I,III| false~circulations of all kinds. Where would it be if it
2591 I,III| beauty of her hair; the king--no doubt as~a delicate flattery--
2592 I,I | except~for a short interval. Kitchen-gardeners carrying their produce to~
2593 I,V | caressing~her with the pretty kittenish grace which women only display
2594 I,VI | develop, enormously, the knavery of men's minds. The object
2595 I,II | bread of the opposition was kneaded and baked, and the scenes
2596 I,V | sitting on her mother's knee, and caressing~her with
2597 I,VII| Cesar, attired in black silk knee-breeches, silk~stockings, and the
2598 I,IV | was cowed; he~heard the knell of failure ringing in his
2599 I,III| malachite, and all the costly knick-knacks of unrestrained~luxury.
2600 I,VI | hair,"--imitating the fatal knife with voice and gesture. "
2601 I,IV | he saw an undershirt of~knitted wool, once white, but now
2602 I,I | like the man who looks for knots in a bulrush. Recollect~
2603 I,I | deputy-mayor, he is /all-I-don't-~know-how/. To put him into public
2604 I,VI | justice by a rap on your knuckles!"~ ~Another knock sounded.~ ~"
2605 I,VI | were away from it and the laboratories~empty.~ ~"Here comes the
2606 I,III| tied to his study or his laboratory; but I like to~believe he
2607 I,VI | earth-~works employ the laboring-classes; hence loans, which find
2608 I,II | education stopped there; his laborious life had kept~him from acquiring
2609 I,VI | rights, a virgin~freshness, a lacteal purity of complexion, and
2610 I,II | Ferdinand du Tillet. This lad--who had~just left a perfumery
2611 I,V | mount a rung of the social ladder, is going the~rounds among
2612 I,V | Perier without ambition, Lafayette a~political prophet, and
2613 I,VI | sang Gaudissart, mimicking Lafon in the role of the Cid. "
2614 I,II | makes love like the King of Lahore. But~the little retail merchant
2615 I,VII| was lighted by an antique lamp with four jets. The~architect
2616 I,IV | to Pallas~brandishing her lance: a myth. The floor was covered
2617 I,VII| dresses its children like~lancers or national guards, buys
2618 I,IV | you, although I am your landlord--or, on the~point of becoming
2619 I,VI | maintain the interests of~landlords. That is the chief question
2620 I,VI | with me placards in all~languages, paste them everywhere,
2621 I,IV | named Cayron,--a man from Languedoc, doing a poor business,~
2622 I,IV | pensive, the vague physical languor of a young girl who has~
2623 I,VI | which had been lost in the~lapse of ages, has been intelligently
2624 I,V | we may be admitted to the larder of credit. You~cannot live
2625 I,VII| People who are sufficiently large-minded to perceive their own innate~
2626 I,VI | Pillerault. "You have negotiated largely with~Monsieur Claparon;
2627 I,VII| he is unable to make it larger. Let~this be a profound
2628 I,IV | been so well~reproduced by Largilliere. Her skin, of a firm full
2629 I,IV | of die~Seine was at your las pall."~ ~"Monsieur le baron!--"~ ~"
2630 I,II | history of this household, lastingly happy through its~feeling,
2631 I,I | shrivelled, withered hand the latch of her own shop-~door, seeming
2632 I,I | leaves a great deal~too much latitude. There should either be
2633 I,III| of Sancerre, painted by~Latour,--the father of Madame Ragon,
2634 I,IV | be seen~behind the brass lattice which topped an unpainted
2635 I,VII| undergoing a~change, now lauded him to the skies.~ ~"He
2636 I,VII| followed by his revellers. Laughs ring loudly; all~present
2637 I,VII| streets~have flowed the lava waves of a volcano. Love
2638 I,VI | appertaining to druggists: lavender, oil of almonds, sweet and~
2639 I,II | cheapen~Napoleon's order by lavishing the cross of the Legion
2640 I,II | at five o'clock, and~read law-reports and books treating of commercial
2641 I,II | await the~result of his law-suit by satisfying the demands
2642 I,IV | Then followed seizures,~law-suits, costs, and the whole judicial
2643 I,III| thumb one of those living lay-figures called in commercial language
2644 I,V | stairs were caked with~a layer of mud, hard or soft according
2645 I,II | his ease, where the mason lays a stone between~breakfast
2646 I,IV | Denn you hat Monsieur de Lazabed, Monsieur Fauquelin of der~
2647 I,IV | and in the quartier Saint-~Lazare and at Tivoli, we shouldn'
2648 I,VII| picture of the Raising of Lazarus.~ ~Jesus commanded the earth
2649 I,VII| Habeneck, the enthusiastic leader of an orchestra raises the
2650 I,II | another heart on which to~lean and moan. Cesarine, to whom
2651 I,V | Cesarine, overcome~and weeping, leaned her head upon Popinot's
2652 I,III| to step back for a better leap. The affair~does not suit
2653 I,III| but love gets onward by leaps of hope, and the more absurd
2654 I,III| boasted of his readiness in learning the niceties of the~trade,
2655 I,VII| generation, in which the bitter leaven of~republican principles
2656 I,VII| Colombier, the father-~in-law of Lebas--old people, but they'll
2657 I,VI | house principles."~ ~This lecture produced upon the mind of
2658 I,IV | coming to the point."~ ~"His ledder gif you in my house a creydit
2659 I,I | Perhaps he should be bled, or leeches~applied."~ ~"No wonder,"
2660 I,VI | situation, and proceeds to legalize the theft he~premeditated.
2661 I,VI | however, there ought to be legislative rectification to~it. At
2662 I,II | the customers; asked in leisure moments for~explanations
2663 I,VI | clear water soured with lemon, and~the rest drugs, chemicals."~ ~
2664 I,II | days with the beautiful lemonade-girl of the cafe of the Milles~
2665 I,IV | one has come but Monsieur Lempereur."~ ~"He can receive the
2666 I,VI | mingled~with hope, which lends them a certain tender emotion;
2667 I,VII| and Madame la~Duchesse de Lenoncourt--"~ ~"Good heavens, Cesar!"
2668 I,IV | This call brought a regular Leonarde, tricked out like a fish-woman.~ ~"
2669 I,IV | folks, as he remarked. The lessee was at~liberty to make improvements;
2670 I,II | eyes Cesar~lessened, as men lessen in presence of disasters
2671 I,I | Claparon was now repeating a lesson du Tillet had cleverly~taught
2672 I,VI | principal actor; he~feared lest the vulgar habits of this
2673 I,III| Happy the youth~who in those levelling days when all hats looked
2674 I,III| delighted to have~found such a lever, exacted from la belle Hollandaise
2675 I,II | business.~ ~When the terrible levy of the year II. made a clean
2676 I,VII| armed with the power of a Leyden jar, which is the greatest~
2677 I,IV | dissemblers, hypocrites, liars;~they will even shed tears.
2678 I,VI | must avoid a conflict';~'Liberalism is the cloak of a coalition'; '
2679 I,I | influence, to celebrate the liberation~of our territory. Let us
2680 I,VII| array of matter-of-course~libraries to be found everywhere and
2681 I,VII| suppers,~toilets, and the library (repaid to Cesarine), cost
2682 I,I | merchant~will soon be a licensed thief. With his mere signature
2683 I,IV | in Paris, like a certain~lichen which grows only in Iceland.
2684 I,VI | Ragons and declared himself liege-vassal forever to the house of~
2685 I,VI | A. POPINOT.~ ~"Behold a lieutenant of Alexander," said Cesar,
2686 I,I | assailing the confidence of a life-long friendship, and~breaking
2687 I,IV | decoraded."~ ~De Marsay lifted his eyeglass, and said, "
2688 I,V | power--"~ ~"Ah! in that light--"~ ~"No power, as I say,
2689 I,VI | est pas~detruit qui veut/. Light-minded people, devoid of conscience,
2690 I,III| said Popinot. "If you would lighten all my fears--~in a year
2691 I,II | the country regions, so likewise did Cephalic~Oil triumph
2692 I,VI | chock-full of reasons for not liking wit, won't believe in~it;
2693 I,VII| fled, trembling in every limb, and hastened back to~Pillerault.~ ~
2694 I,IV | house a creydit vich is only limided by der~limids of my privade
2695 I,IV | vich is only limided by der~limids of my privade fortune."~ ~
2696 I,V | all sincerity, "Does he limp?" She loved those~liquid
2697 I,II | not alarming because the limpid glance of his frank blue~
2698 I,II | the moment when, under~a linden at Sceaux, Constance-Barbe-Josephine
2699 I,II | Pillerault was the forewoman of a linen-draper's establishment called~Le
2700 I,I | any discussion about law, lingered in the~shop; and as the
2701 I,VI | journalist showed the empty lining of his pockets. Popinot
2702 I,VII| Cesarine formed, as it were, a link which united the three types~
2703 I,VII| the history of France is linked~to those walls. The stairway
2704 I,VI | devoured their dinner like lions, and drank~like lords to
2705 I,V | should~say in chemistry, in liquefaction. Perhaps you are right;
2706 I,V | cloth, on~which stood a liqueur-stand. The newness of this room
2707 I,III| certain of~Madame Anfoux's liqueurs, which certain persons,
2708 I,VI | tipplers of~brandy and other liquors, announced the arrival of
2709 I,II | sagacious, in his capacity~of listener; others, charmed with his
2710 I,VI | out that he~possessed no literary talent whatever; he meant
2711 I,IV | clergy. The indefatigable litigant wrote letters on this subject
2712 I,IV | hastily cleared of its litter,~which bore testimony to
2713 I,II | the guidance of a~man in livery, towards an office far less
2714 I,I | sixty thousand francs; and, lo! Monsieur now wants to~become
2715 I,IV | t a moment to love or~to loaf; I have lost even the inspiration
2716 I,IV | whole theory of the modern loan-system. Come and~see me often;
2717 I,III| the Republic made, forced~loans--well, they pay them back;
2718 I,II | morning, and prowled about the lobby of the theatres at~night. "
2719 I,II | unhappy regions!) without /local~organs/. The papers were
2720 I,V | affair is settled.~Here, lock up that cheque on the Bank
2721 I,III| Popinot raised his head, locked up his cubby-hole, and came~
2722 I,II | depreciation at the Bourse,~and locking up his securities with unspeakable
2723 I,IV | paint~satisfactory; the locks were never more than three
2724 I,IV | he was accompanied by a locksmith and a painter~and glazier,--
2725 I,IV | employ the masons, painters,~locksmiths, carpenters, and upholsterers
2726 I,V | from the staircase.~All the lodgers, with the exception of Gigonnet,
2727 I,V | later Cesarine had board, lodging, and a~salary of three thousand
2728 I,VII| palaces where beings of a loftier~nature glide. The incense
2729 I,III| whom he had once laughed so~loftily. Enticed along by the banker,--
2730 I,II | looked at~business from a lofty standpoint; he intoxicated
2731 I,VII| money. The all-powerful logic of the enamored~Popinot
2732 I,I | thousand deaths; it~seems logical to take it. Alexandre Crottat
2733 I,IV | who solemnly put Christmas logs on their fire, draw kings
2734 I,V | bread. I have long been~lonely; you shall replace the poor
2735 I,II | where he could put away, in~long-coveted articles of furniture, the
2736 I,VII| sombre, and brought the long-repressed tears into his~eyes. Poor
2737 I,VII| Grandville, my landlord,--the longest head at the royal court,
2738 I,II | Billardiere, Montauran, Bauvan, Longuy, Manda, Bernier,~du Guenic,
2739 I,VII| in spite of myself. Your~look--three words suffice--"~ ~"
2740 I,IV | expense without obtaining the looked-for result."~ ~"There are expenses
2741 I,II | of the State,--he kept a loophole to become~in after years
2742 I,I | falling from his eyes, and loosening the iron band~which bound
2743 I,VI | to him whose triumphant~loquacity and activity were to win
2744 I,VI | like lions, and drank~like lords to the future success of
2745 I,VII| honor to present to your lordship Monsieur le~president of
2746 I,V | climates the fur of animals loses~all color and turns white
2747 I,III| put~it judiciously into lotteries, hoping that some day she
2748 I,VI | manuscript and began to read in a~loud voice, with much emphasis, "
2749 I,I | never said to me one word louder than another. His daughter
2750 I,VII| his marriage with Maria Louisa~of Austria, was determined
2751 I,II | dinner,--for the Parisian lounger is~as often a man filled
2752 I,II | unprofitable enterprise, he was lounging one day~along the boulevard
2753 I,IV | of windows and build us~a Louvre. Cesar is never idle about
2754 I,VII| Desmarets."~ ~"She will be the loveliest woman in the room," said
2755 I,V | the virtues of exquisite loving-kindness; he is not permitted~to
2756 I,I | studied the appartement lovingly; he had put all his art
2757 I,V | jesting, parches the throat, lowers the proudest look, and makes
2758 I,I | Dieu! I can't sleep.~Hey! luckily little Popinot has the finest
2759 I,VI | royalist, would~have sent the luckless traveller to the scaffold.
2760 I,II | Chat-qui-pelote~(one of the luminaries of the Rue Saint-Denis),
2761 I,III| Monsieur Clement Chardin des Lupeaulx to Germany~during the Hundred
2762 I,I | from a curtain-holder whose lurid centre~was like the eye
2763 I,III| opportunity to~thoughts lurking in the depths of a purpose
2764 I,III| lover if he limited her luxuries. La belle Hollandaise~was
2765 I,V | with a clock shaped~like a lyre, and two oval vases in Sevres
2766 I,II | At the battle of Trebia, Macdonald called for volunteers~to
2767 I,III| Hollandaise~was one of those mad-cap women who care nothing as
2768 I,VII| deserves baptism."~ ~"But, madame--"~ ~"Never mind, I don't
2769 I,IV | passed the night at an inn, maddened~with grief, while his terrified
2770 I,VI | manner.~ ~"No--hair--can be made--to grow! Hair cannot be
2771 I,II | certain land about the~Madeleine--"~ ~"Yes; I heard Nucingen
2772 I,I | yourself, and tell me what maggot you've got in your~head,"
2773 I,II | for the first time, had a magical effect. Not only all France,~
2774 I,IV | Court of~commerce, various magistrates, Monsieur le comte de Grandville
2775 I,III| craving to imitate those~magnates; he stroked his chin, rose
2776 I,V | In the grasp of that magnetic ardor, produced by an influx
2777 I,VI | power of his commercial magnetism. In those days~he was slim,
2778 I,III| penetration of a seer; he magnetizes his~dupe. The notary had
2779 I,V | where the Dresden Madonna, magnificently framed~according to his
2780 I,VI | office, which might be nobly magnified if the judges had time~to
2781 I,V | landlord, who chatters like a magpie, to renew a note of~twelve
2782 I,II | mistress had been fond of the maid, and~brought up with her
2783 I,VI | gloomy silence Birotteau maintained when it was a question of
2784 I,VI | cephalic afflictions, by maintaining the~normal temperature of
2785 I,VII| Saint-Denis displayed itself majestically~in the plenitude of its
2786 I,II | for none. He was appointed major in the National Guard, although~
2787 I,IV | down, monsieur," said the make-believe banker.~ ~Claparon, without
2788 I,III| paper-weights of~carved malachite, and all the costly knick-knacks
2789 I,III| as they so often are by maladies? Physical~evil, considered
2790 I,II | sufferings of~that horrible malady. Finally, the Carminative
2791 I,V | action upon the hair; but the Malays buy it up for its~weight
2792 I,III| to revive the color of male and female tresses.~This
2793 I,IV | Dismayed by the curt malevolence of the old man, Cesar was
2794 I,VII| said Lebas, smiling at the malicious meaning~of Pillerault, who,
2795 I,II | speedily takes a course of malignant meanness~which puts him
2796 I,VI | himself with brewing his own malt. As to the petty trader,~
2797 I,VI | delights in having an insect to maltreat. The landlord, astride~of
2798 I,III| taking the wife of another man--"~ ~"You are beating round
2799 I,I | rooms of the cook and the man-of-~all-work. The fourth shall
2800 I,VI | this occasion, like the manager~of a theatre who is uneasy
2801 I,VI | the three-sixes. Old Finot~manages young Finot by famine. Andoche,
2802 I,V | custom does allow the~managing-partner to advance a certain sum
2803 I,II | Montauran, Bauvan, Longuy, Manda, Bernier,~du Guenic, and
2804 I,VI | sleeping fancy as a celestial mandate.~ ~*****~ ~Cesar and Popinot
2805 I,II | success and clutch it by the mane, lets~fortune escape. Popinot
2806 I,V | a few atoms of oxide of manganese, some~phosphate of lime,
2807 I,VII| the soul was never better manifested than in this saintly~priest,
2808 I,VII| the~mirrors of the salon, manifesting a joy at which people thinking~
2809 I,I | rather pinched,~with a little manipulation he will come out all right."~ ~
2810 I,VII| columns were a number of~mantel ornaments chosen with taste;
2811 I,VI | She retained the black~mantilla trimmed with black lace
2812 I,VI | india-rubber mantles that the mantle of justice was rubbed~into
2813 I,VI | such heavy india-rubber mantles that the mantle of justice
2814 I,V | republican virtues; he thought Manuel a pure man,~General Foy
2815 I,II | working all Sunday at the~manufactory--had seen neither the Ragons,
2816 I,V | addressing Gobenheim the manufacturer, "vy he tid not~ask me for
2817 I,III| and one of~the best known manufacturers of Parisian perfumery; he
2818 I,V | it--"~ ~"That it has got manure upon its head," said Popinot,
2819 I,VI | impatient Gaudissart seized the manuscript and began to read in a~loud
2820 Add | Gobseck, Sarah Van~Gobseck~The Maranas~Scenes from a Courtesan'
2821 I,IV | committed infamies worthy of Marat,--obscene~drawings at which
2822 I,IV | turned as~he crossed the Marche des Innocents.~ ~"Poor boy!
2823 I,VI | worn when he received the Marechal de~Villars on his return
2824 I,VII| re-decorated for his marriage with Maria Louisa~of Austria, was determined
2825 I,III| she played~Susanne in the "Mariage de Figaro."~ ~The guests
2826 I,II | former perfumer to the Queen Marie Antoinette, at The Queen
2827 I,II | perfumer to her majesty Queen Marie-~Antoinette, confided to
2828 I,VI | like that used by Queen Marie-Antoinette at Trianon; her gown (the~
2829 I,V | nuts out of the fire, too! Marie-Jeanne, bring~my clogs and my rabbit-skin
2830 I,II | actresses,--Florine, Tullia, Mariette, etc. They laid down the
2831 I,III| heat of the complexion were markedly ignoble. Instead~of the
2832 I,V | are a good man," said the market-woman. "Excuse my words,~madame;
2833 I,III| stamped his~shoulder with the marking-iron; he lost his head.~ ~"Come,"
2834 I,II | shirt-frill. His coat, of maroon~cloth, had wide flaps and
2835 I,VII| appointed for signing the marriage-contract.~ ~Constance found in her
2836 I,V | Cesarine; so that~when she marries she may buy some trifle
2837 I,VI | galley-slave, keep him down on his marrow-bones in the~dust. Are not they
2838 I,II | of defeating the Pavillon Marsan!" cried the other.~"The
2839 I,III| soldier presenting arms to a marshal~of France.~ ~"Popinot, I
2840 I,II | had but that one spurt of martial courage. During the month
2841 I,III| render despicable in the marts of Paris the honorable and
2842 I,VI | mankind, will know what a martyrdom it was for~this poor man
2843 Add | and Racket~ ~Camusot de Marville, Madame~The Vendetta~Jealousies
2844 I,VI | Sganarelle, the lies of Mascarille, and the empty~bags of Scapin
2845 I,IV | that kept him to a sense of~masculine superiority. The charming
2846 I,IV | partner~seemed to the judge to mask some important request.
2847 I,IV | entry),~at your own cost, in masonry. Don't fear,--I shall ask
2848 I,IV | resumed Grindot, "employ the masons, painters,~locksmiths, carpenters,
2849 I,VII| which gives to the bourgeois masses their vulgar aspect, made
2850 I,IV | Claparon, after a pause. "Such master-strokes need men.~There's the man
2851 I,V | nature,~his forethought and mathematical reflection, were seen in
2852 I,I | Crottat, just as a ram, or a mathematician absorbed in the~solution
2853 I,VII| short, the whole array of matter-of-course~libraries to be found everywhere
2854 I,VI | dear boy; take up the straw matting near your bed."~ ~"Permit
2855 I,VI | the lengths. A collegian's~mattress on a bedstead of red wood,
2856 I,II | harsh application of the maxim "each~for himself,"--the
2857 I,VII| declined the honors of the~mayoralty, pointing out one more worthy
2858 I,V | God, like the larks in the meadow, in quiet places, trying
2859 I,III| their neighbors,~basely, meanly; as, for example, you would
2860 I,II | takes a course of malignant meanness~which puts him below the
2861 I,I | sides of a precipice into a measureless abyss.~ ~"My dear Monsieur
2862 I,V | unremunerative, required an immense mechanical toil. The gains were~not
2863 I,VII| and her dress trimmed with Mechlin."~ ~"Monsieur and Madame
2864 I,I | we distrust a notary who meddles~with speculations? Every
2865 I,II | honest~bourgeois without meddling in politics. To recover
2866 I,VII| the public wealth, these mediators between the law~and the
2867 I,V | relation, little~Bianchon the medical student; he told me that
2868 I,I | not take his precautionary medicine at the beginning of the
2869 I,V | little envious of such mediocrity, praised his excellence
2870 I,IV | with Macassar Oil. He was meditating on~the labels and the shape
2871 I,II | use language~which was a medley of commonplaces mixed with
2872 I,VI | appeared. His~face, which was melancholy, like that of a man weary
2873 I,VI | make us a sauce like~this; mellifluous! Some give you clear water
2874 I,VII| most innocent drinks, have mellowed the angularities~of the
2875 I,III| which had come to perfect mellowness, and for certain of~Madame
2876 I,VII| thirsting for his divine melodies, our souls~cry out, "Again!
2877 I,VI | unfolded, as they do in~melodramas, a scroll on which was written "
2878 I,II | peculiar to clerkdom, such as melons in their earliest prime,
2879 I,II | specifications, and all the thousand memoranda brought to bear upon a~man
2880 I,VI | moment I am elaborating a memorial to his Highness,~the Keeper
2881 I,II | find~nothing but tender memories. They had taken as head-clerk
2882 I,II | epidermis. Truly scientific men--men who are really great
2883 I,I | Besides,~perhaps du Tillet has mended his ways."~ ~"Everything
2884 I,V | offered the prayer /Pro meo~fratre Caesare/, my eyes
2885 I,V | the Sieur Cesar~Birotteau, merchant-perfumer, living in Paris, Rue Saint-Honore,~
2886 I,IV | The appartements in this~merchant-place have, naturally, no other
2887 I,IV | kingdom which some modern Mercier might build up of cryptograms
2888 I,III| deliverance to the tender mercies of Jews and~Pharisees; and
2889 I,III| delicious~curves; the gray merino dress with green furbelows
2890 I,VI | and therefore~has doubly merited this honor."~ ~"How well
2891 I,VI | lace woven in large square meshes; her~caps, old-fashioned
2892 I,IV | Good Sense" of the~Cure Meslier, and went to Mass; not that
2893 I,VI | engaged his~place at the Messageries-Royales. To bid adieu to his beloved
2894 I,VI | his hand. He looked like a messenger of the~Chamber of Peers,
2895 I,I | busy," said Cesar to the messengers; who all left the bills
2896 I,V | Birotteau. "What! are there metals and oils in~hair? Unless
2897 I,VI | landlord,--just as the cat metamorphosed into a woman ran after a~
2898 I,II | favorably known in this metropolis and abroad, has discovered
2899 I,VI | honor to share with Prince Metternich."~ ~"--as to commemorate
2900 I,II | relation to results. This mid-day of life, when living forces~
2901 I,IV | the Madeleine to us?--a midge of a thing.~Pr-r-r! We don'
2902 I,V | lights a brazier in the midriff of ambitious men~and lovers
2903 I,II | which they have created--oh, mighty revolution!--the~paid advertisement.
2904 I,I | upon the world. Hey! hey!~Mignonne! how about the ball? I am
2905 I,II | served up in flowing phrases mildly put forth, which sounded
2906 I,IV | round, and she looked like~a mile-post, dressed in striped calico,
2907 I,II | Birotteau, was drafted into~the militia, and won the rank of captain
2908 I,IV | dressing-gown, watching his~milk in a little metal heater
2909 I,II | lemonade-girl of the cafe of the Milles~Colonnnes, and several other
2910 I,II | against the window-panes of milliners, confectioners,~and linen-drapers,
2911 I,II | resemblance to the Venus of Milo that all who knew her recognized
2912 I,VI | retailers!"~ ~sang Gaudissart, mimicking Lafon in the role of the
2913 I,VI | through a long course of mimicry before he~managed to acquire
2914 I,V | injure you nor~the God who mingles, at His will, your joy with
2915 I,IV | silently~through the night, mingling her prayers and terrors.
2916 I,IV | so that rents are at a~minimum.~ ~Monsieur Molineux lived
2917 I,V | protege of the~palace, of a ministeralist, an incorrigible royalist
2918 I,VI | chambers, antechambers, ministers--"~ ~"Ministers?" said Pillerault,
2919 I,II | question of upsetting the ministry. See~my brother--"~ ~He
2920 I,II | with the inflexibility of a Minos who had crossed the Styx
2921 I,III| my part to attend to. One minute, Popinot. I~give a great
2922 I,IV | inspires the truly English minutiae of~their toilet. The beauty
2923 I,II | heights of hope into the miry~marshes of doubt and uncertainty.
2924 I,II | recollection of these domestic~misadventures. The constancy of his royalist
2925 I,V | the smallest commercial mischance; but Cephalic Oil will~undoubtedly
2926 I,VI | a licentious life,~whose misdeeds were still further evidenced
2927 I,IV | towards bankruptcy, just as a misdemeanor leads to~crime. The secret
2928 I,V | one from Tours, which was~misdirected and therefore delayed. I
2929 I,VI | passionate~integrity, became misers, denying themselves everything;
2930 I,IV | the smallest commercial mishap, now giving him the~tenderest
2931 I,V | by his~science, we shall mislead the public. I was in the
2932 I,IV | bursting into a laugh.~ ~Cesar, misled by the luxury about him,
2933 | miss
2934 I,V | du Tillet, "you haf joust~missed blaying me a bretty drick
2935 I,VI | contains the bulbs, is the~mission of CEPHALIC OIL. In short,
2936 I,IV | an impossibility. Cesar~mistook the elation of the man's
2937 I,II | astringent stage of suspicion and mistrust is as quick to declare~itself
2938 I,III| the accent, she~could not misunderstand the glance, which wrapped
2939 I,III| out his brains, hoping to mitigate the disgrace of his conduct~
2940 I,VI | dress and~habits. She wore mittens, and carried in all weathers
2941 Add | Classes~ ~Ragon, M. and Mme.~An Episode Under the Terror~ ~
2942 I,IV | chalk, and read the works of Mmes. Cottin and~Riccoboni, of
2943 I,II | heart on which to~lean and moan. Cesarine, to whom from
2944 I,II | to the hidden grief which moaned silently in the~gilded armchair
2945 I,V | heaven's sake do not~raise a mob, and bring a crowd upon
2946 I,IV | francs?" said Molineux, with mocking~incredulity. "Have you got
2947 I,IV | through the delicacy of its modelling,--~like those noses, essentially
2948 I,V | virtuous people, by the Ragons, models of the~honorable bourgeoisie,
2949 I,V | ancients, in spite of all the moderns may~say; I stand by Boileau
2950 I,IV | drop him a few words on the modifications~which should be introduced
2951 I,II | gold and their dresses and moire in those~articles of furniture,
2952 I,III| The eyes of the poor man moistened, in spite of~himself.~ ~"
2953 I,VII| garlands. The bourgeois~Momus appears, followed by his
2954 I,I | a fortune; I repeat it. Mon Dieu! I can't sleep.~Hey!
2955 I,II | yellow, red, and blue, of~the monarch of the "The Queen of Roses,"
2956 I,II | himself an element of monarchical election,--like the stamp
2957 I,VII| two~centuries of the old monarchy had produced. The thirst
2958 I,V | usurer's green boxes and the monastic austerity of the room, whose~
2959 I,VII| naively, "there will come a~Monday."~ ~*****~ ~Nothing can
2960 I,IV | the~smallest civility in money-matters,--my rents are my living.
2961 I,II | dyed black, indicated a~mongrel descent, through which he
2962 I,II | records, open volumes of the "Moniteur," with passages~carefully
2963 I,V | bedroom, as plain as that of a~monk or an old soldier (the two
2964 I,IV | tenants, clerks, horses, dogs, monkeys, to whom~they send, on the
2965 I,V | the~Academy of Sciences a monograph on that subject. Hair is
2966 I,IV | the~amusement had become a monomania. He was fond of protecting
2967 I,II | strokes by which~short-lived monopolies were called into being and
2968 I,III| up indigo when they have monopolized the trade, and~pull down
2969 I,V | Popinot has told us~that monsieur--"~ ~"Hey, hey! my children,
2970 I,V | country jaunt, the opera, the Montagnes-Beaujon, /et caetera/.~Pillerault
2971 I,VII| Jean-Jacques Rousseau, Montesquieu, Moliere, Buffon,~Fenelon,
2972 I,V | life~lowered the stern and monumental character which painters,
2973 I,IV | abbartement, of vich she hear so mooch."~ ~"Monsieur le baron!--"~ ~"
2974 I,II | gloves,--as the~Turks the Moors; he knew no guide but his
2975 I,II | broom incontinently~became a mop. This ironical scene excited
2976 I,VII| fine block of marble; a moquette carpet, of Turkish~design,
2977 I,V | without a word.~ ~Some moralists hold that love is an involuntary
2978 I,IV | innocent perfumer suspect his morals.~ ~"Sit down, monsieur,"
2979 I,II | he quitted the Quai des Morfondus for his little third~storey.~ ~"
2980 I,IV | him to go at once to the Morgue. During the whole of~that
2981 I,V | his~elbows free to-morrow morning--Popinot has gone out without
2982 I,IV | dressing-room and~wearing a pretty morning-gown, fresh and rosy as a young
2983 I,I | see~him coming home in the mornings: where from? Nobody knows.
2984 I,VI | other~by snatching a few morsels for men of influence,--in
2985 I,VII| natural, but sometimes mortal. When he found himself once
2986 I,III| repentance the virtue of mortals'?"~ ~"Provided," answered
2987 I,V | will be able to bear the mortification which~God has laid upon
2988 I,IV | send, on the rebound, the mortifications they have endured in the~
2989 I,IV | Molineux detected it; he was mortified at such a look from an officer~
2990 I,II | first into the~redoubt at Moscow displayed no greater courage
2991 | mostly
2992 I,III| turning Popinot's head. Her mother--having renounced, not without~
2993 I,IV | ceremony?" said~Delphine, motioning towards the table which
2994 I,II | of a coiner; he remained motionless, gazing through the window-panes~
2995 I,III| the perfumer; "that was my~motto. If you don't win my daughter,
2996 I,IV | inkstands, in~which the ink was mouldy and the pens as rumpled
2997 I,VII| heads of the dancers in the /moulinet/. The expression of his~
2998 I,VII| thumping the most voluminous mounds of flesh ever yet seen in
2999 I,VII| du Pauvre," delights in~mounting guard, goes on Sunday to
3000 I,V | loved the smile,~partly mournful, with which he listened
3001 I,VI | into a woman ran after a~mouse when she caught sight of
3002 I,IV | covered them. The wall-paper, mouse-~gray with a pink border,
3003 I,IV | I assemble~my friends as much--to celebrate the emancipation
3004 I,VI | as~merchants.~ ~Another much-used stratagem, and one to which
3005 I,V | rather large quantity of mucus, a small quantity of white
|