Chapter
1 1| neighborhoods in which they lived.~ ~In this way, the State
2 2| themselves in this way. Napoleon lived with Berthier, Richelieu
3 2| the place~Royale, where he lived on the ground-floor of an
4 3| domestic selfishness. Had she lived in the country~she would
5 3| her~marriage the Saillards lived without other society than
6 3| the rue Greneta, where he lived on the third~floor of an
7 3| of the under-clerks, and lived in the~world of journalists
8 4| bureaus.~ ~Three men-servants lived in peace in the Billardiere
9 4| affairs thoroughly, they lived at the~ministry like spiders
10 4| retired in 1814, and now lived in the pension Vanquer~in
11 4| quarter. Dutocq himself lived in a pension in the rue
12 4| gentleman in elegant clothes. He lived, for good~reasons, in the
13 4| with dried~fishskins. He lived with his sister, an artificial-flower
14 4| the~quarter in which he lived. He had given up taking
15 4| economized on dinners and lived~entirely on bread and water,
16 4| women of uncertain means, he lived well, went to the theatre~
17 4| which imposes on~fools. He lived on the second floor of a
18 4| No human life was ever lived so thoroughly by rule. Poiret
19 4| person in the house where he lived, and~always carried the
20 4| that no one knew~where he lived, nor who were his protectors,
21 4| his life for a cause, he~lived on a page of Volney, studied
22 5| spirit of hatred. Hatred lived in the rue Saint-Louis-Saint-Honore,~
23 5| whereas love and devotion lived far-off in the rue du Roi-Dore
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