Chapter
1 I | generationfour pleasant young fellows whose existence
2 II | happiness,~that is to say, of a young man of twenty-sixdo you
3 II | objection; for, fortunately, a young bachelor is allowed to make
4 II | have been a very unhappy young man. Eh! eh! that word~happiness,
5 II | this Godefroid's costume. A young~man of six-and-twenty, who
6 II | return for his~own love; a young man, I say, who has found
7 II | poor. And poverty spoils a young man's happiness, unless
8 II | Espard. She said that a young man ought to live on an~
9 III| of the Bohemian life of a young man of fashion, the dressing-~
10 III| it aside for his ward's~young man's follies. 'If you will
11 III| like a fool, as so many young~men do, let it go in follies
12 III| said of some of us."~ ~"A young fellow that starts with
13 III| read the minds of all the young men~in Paris at one glance (
14 III| such inquiry any ordinary young man (and we ourselves that
15 III| less voluptuously than a young lady ought~to do. There
16 III| should not dance like~a young girl, nor a little jackanapes
17 IV | fallen in love with this young lady; as~it was, out of
18 IV | in a turban), 'There is a young lady~that dances enchantingly;'
19 IV | ballroom.~ ~" 'Who?'~ ~" 'That young lady.'~ ~" 'Oh, Isaure d'
20 IV | with them since the two young~ladies were children, and
21 IV | to~her that she was still young and pretty, that rose-color
22 IV | things. It never struck the young man that the~green silk
23 V | they were sure to meet the~young men of their set, she would
24 V | greatest happiness of a young man's dreams? He was trying
25 V | paid assiduous court to the young lady; Desroches~wanted to
26 V | Matifat's partner's son, a young clerk in the~adult department.
27 V | Cochin, Mme.~Desroches, and a young Popinot, still in the drug
28 VI | in selfishness.~When the young scion of nobility discovered
29 VI | limitless affection for a young provincial's articles of
30 VI | impending loss; even so a young commander might shiver at
31 VI | that~is to hold a brood of young birds by and by. Isaure'
32 VI | marriage of a good-looking young fellow of seven-and-~twenty
33 VI | relish warm flesh; they~feel young again with the young bliss,
34 VI | feel young again with the young bliss, unspoiled as yet
35 VII| to them, and to-day the young man very likely has an~income
36 VII| devotion, she seemed to be the young girl and Malvina the old
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