Chapter
1 1| family, remarking to the pretty woman at his side, "That'
2 1| to drive in the Bois in a pretty~carriage, to equal Madame
3 2| nobleness of private~lives. A pretty and rather wide antechamber,
4 2| enough to be loved by a pretty woman for~yourself--"~ ~"
5 2| indemnity amounted to the pretty little sum of twenty-~five
6 3| Her voice had a rather pretty~range of intonation, from
7 3| however, only thinking how the pretty~Madame Colleville, whose
8 3| by the~sweet voice of a pretty woman!) "Oh, yes! I know
9 3| himself a~seraglio with the pretty wives of the under-clerks,
10 4| bonbons on New-~Year's day and pretty boxes for her birthday.
11 4| they bestowed upon him. A pretty youth of twenty-two, tall
12 5| s waistcoat]. "You've a pretty waistcoat,~that cost you
13 5| wife has ended where all pretty women end--~in piety."~ ~
14 6| poor, even~though he has a pretty wife?"~ ~Henry. "You are
15 6| over the management of this pretty little comedy to me,~and
16 7| Stop! wait!" cried the pretty Parisian, bolting the door
17 7| obligations as a lover. A clever pretty woman makes an atmosphere~
18 7| minister himself she took the pretty~air of sauciness which women
19 7| Now if I were one with a pretty woman who was also intimate
20 7| instigated one~of those pretty little comedies which Parisian
21 8| the minister of State, pretty~well, and if he can help
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