Chapter
1 I | disorganised by the outbreak~of the French Revolution and the Napoleonic
2 I | altar.~ ~At the time of the French expedition into Spain to
3 I | once more on the throne, a French general came to~the island
4 I | could fail to discern a French soul~in the sudden change
5 II | given by the town to the French officers, betook~himself
6 II | all~our strivings?~ ~The French General guessed rightly
7 II | find so much piety in a French~military man, the worthy
8 II | confessor came to inform the French~General that Sister Theresa
9 II | your companion understand French?" The veiled figure~bowed
10 III| way you may note that the French popular~airs are those most
11 IV | are the birthright of the French~noblesse, as of every patrician
12 IV | certainly pre-eminently French. The scion of the Faubourg~
13 IV | among themselves. When the French noblesse of other times
14 IV | still a future before the French aristocracy,~there would
15 IV | examples set before the French noblesse to show that it
16 IV | gained the confidence of the French~nation and led them to believe
17 VI | energies. When he reached the French~colony at Senegal, a half-dead
18 VI | had not destroyed the very French quick~mobility of her person.
19 X | Those are the~brothels of French history.~ ~"This preamble,
|