Chapter
1 II | complete, and unadulterated~happiness consists in this Nineteenth
2 II | Nineteenth Century in Paristhe happiness,~that is to say, of a young
3 II | young man. Eh! eh! that word~happiness, unhappily, seems to us
4 II | wiseacres inquiring what happiness is. A~very clever woman
5 II | clever woman said that 'Happiness was where you chose to put~
6 II | distilled," said Blondet. "Happiness, like Good, like Evil, is~
7 II | Philistia!" put in Bixiou.~ ~"Happiness at six-and-twenty in Paris
8 II | six-and-twenty in Paris is not the happiness of six-and-~twenty atsay
9 II | harlequin's coat that we call happiness; andwell,~there was neither
10 II | poverty spoils a young man's happiness, unless he holds our~transcendental
11 II | nothing more~wearing than happiness within combined with adversity
12 II | IMproper that Godefroid's happiness became complete. There is
13 III| superfluities; his material happiness was~complete.~ ~"Suppose
14 III| and to ask~them whether happiness at six-and-twenty is or
15 III| men) would reply that the happiness is incomplete; that it is~
16 III| cross purposes. Now for happiness as a mental condition.~ ~"
17 IV | that instead~of enjoying my happiness with fear and trembling
18 V | explain to you in what the happiness of a man~consists when he
19 V | Godefroid secured the~greatest happiness of a young man's dreams?
20 V | some guarantee for a wife's happiness,' to~use their own expression;
21 V | To put another kind of happiness before you, you should have
22 VI | tormented by incomplete happiness. It is wretched, and that
23 VI | these preparations, your happiness in~bloom.'~ ~" 'Just say
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