Chapter
1 1| Celestine her due place in society. The young lady had,~moreover,
2 1| and went a great deal into society to obtain the~consideration
3 1| are of man, all of which~society fashions to meet its needs.
4 1| others; for in all countries society, before~making up its mind
5 1| one party or another in society; but being~incapable of
6 1| by the restraints which society~imposes. In her anger she
7 1| quite enough to attract~society in Paris. Rabourdin was
8 2| commissioner to a secret~society; and filled a position of
9 2| Celestine was able to make society talk of her~as soon as the
10 3| rendezvous of the~fashionable society of the Marais, the faubourg
11 3| Saillards lived without other society than that of the~Abbe Gaudron,
12 4| bodies,~vice-president of the Society of Belles-lettres, member
13 4| Saint-Joseph and of the Society of Prisons, one of~the mayors
14 4| Rhetore, whom he knew in the society of actresses, procured him
15 4| des Lupeaulx,~with whom in society he stood on an equality,
16 4| in short, a microcosm of~society, with its oddities and hatreds,
17 7| Contrary to the usual custom in~society, every one cried out as
18 7| we all defend an enemy in society.~ ~"Do her justice, ladies,"
19 8| interests of some secret society of~which, as yet, we know
20 8| as confronting the bold society of the "Doctrine," entitled~"
21 8| and that is the sort of~society the Charter has given us,--
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