Chapter
1 I | grounds; and he may marry a girl of noble family. The chap
2 III| voluptuous decorous dance? Such a girl does not knock audaciously
3 III| adorable,the fair-haired girl,~I say, will always be more
4 III| should not dance like~a young girl, nor a little jackanapes
5 IV | notary's clerk), 'There is a girl that dances~uncommonly well;'
6 IV | fall frankly in love with a girl like Isaure, with~a view
7 IV | Rastignac went off to a tall girl chatting in the card-room.~'
8 IV | He will marry the eldest girl in all probability.'~ ~" '
9 IV | said~Finot.~ ~" 'A charming girl,' said Ferdinand du Tillet
10 IV | easily,~after the manner of a girl entirely ignorant of money
11 IV | love with the fair-haired girl."~ ~"He neglects his interests,"
12 V | Ferdinand!' When the poor girl's eyes fell on that two-~
13 V | highly-wrought, sensitive girl, love sometimes got the~
14 V | why, this. General Rule: A girl that has~once given away
15 V | Well, Matifat meant~the girl to marry well, on the strength
16 V | The daughter was a girl with no manner at all. She
17 V | think at all: Marry!When a girl marries, it~means that the
18 VI | of every heart, be it a girl's heart, a provincial's,
19 VI | seven-and-~twenty and a charming girl of nineteen that dances
20 VII| danced, a~happy wife, a girl no longer. The little Baroness
21 VII| she seemed to be the young girl and Malvina the old mother.~
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