Chapter
1 1| a share~assessed to each person of one or two francs for
2 2| Lupeaulx was interested in any person or in any thing he attended
3 2| way to opposition.~ ~In person, Clement des Lupeaulx had
4 2| much~embarrassed by his own person, who, in his desire to maintain
5 2| companion on the way in the person of~Monsieur Isidore Baudoyer,
6 3| great-niece, Elisabeth.~ ~In person, Isidore was a tall, stout
7 4| mayors of Paris, etc."~ ~The person who requires so much typographic
8 4| took little care of his person; his clothes~were ill-cut,
9 4| fortunes and~promote him. The person he most liked to annoy was
10 4| Minard paid their visits in person on New-Year's day. Those
11 4| He did not know a single person in the house where he lived,
12 4| cause independent of his own person. He~wiped his face, examined
13 4| fault he would kill that person. Dutocq~meanly courted Fleury
14 6| lost no time in coming in person~to thank you for the magnificent
15 6| family~still survives in the person of a single heir to the
16 7| you, you thought me~less a person than I am,--a sort of school-girl."~ ~"
17 7| woman~bestowed upon her person. No dressmaker was ever
18 7| knows?--women like this person, who seems ready to~will
19 8| communicated to a single person. It is one of~those ideas
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