Chapter
1 I | the art of typography in Paris, the only~machinery in use
2 I | when~he sent his son to Paris to study the higher branches
3 I | scholar; and yet when he~left Paris at the end of 1819, summoned
4 I | wears out the type. You in Paris have been making such a
5 I | articles.~ ~"Aha! my boy, Paris is Paris, and the provinces
6 I | Aha! my boy, Paris is Paris, and the provinces are the
7 I | wider business views of Paris, was amazed at such a~prompt
8 I | differences between the Paris trade and the business of
9 I | temperaments.~Then, on a visit to Paris undertaken to solicit the
10 I | cheap printing from the Paris book trade;~but master and
11 I | have just received from~Paris?" He drew a tiny volume
12 I | brought the urchin from~Paris). This youth introduced
13 II | just above the road from~Paris to Bordeaux, so that the
14 II | the direct road runs from Paris to Bordeaux.~Everybody has
15 II | as for~sending a boy to Paris, it was sending him, they
16 II | would obtain~for her in Paris. Nais was enchanted by the
17 II | in and they could go to~Paris. Meanwhile they were bound
18 II | put the longed-for life in Paris quite out of the~question,
19 III | sail, and so came back to Paris a year sooner~than his sometime
20 III | sometime companion. Once in Paris, his recent misfortunes,~
21 III | and a political career in~Paris. Here was a fair tree to
22 III | than in the lofty world of Paris. You might compare these
23 III | from~afar, she sighed for Paris, where great men live. For
24 IV | fashion and elegance of Paris was strikingly~apparent
25 IV | and spent their winters in~Paris. This evening they had driven
26 V | perhaps, he will go to Paris, the only place that can~
27 V | and rewarded. Living in Paris is expensive, and the~earnings
28 V | playing-cards was made in Paris.~ ~When those immortals,
29 VI | transparent spots in it. In~Paris there are learned men among
30 VI | abolished sooner or later~in Paris, for no one will afford
31 VI | hoard back with him from Paris, and~it was this sum that
32 VII | before her~mind turned to Paris. Meanwhile Mme. de Bargeton'
33 VIII | melancholy, "I am going to Paris, and my father is taking
34 VIII | steps that~I wish to take in Paris. You, my darling, have brought
35 VIII | and then I mean to wait in Paris until the time comes when
36 VIII | Escarbas and the winters in Paris. It is the only~life for
37 VIII | and we shall soon be in Paris. There, beloved, is the
38 VIII | uncomfortable in any other society. Paris, besides, is~the capital
39 VIII | stimulates the intellect--Paris, where men rub against~one
40 VIII | rapid bird's-eye view of Paris which they brought before
41 VIII | under a stone in a~marsh. Paris and her splendors rose before
42 VIII | splendors rose before him; Paris, the Eldorado of~provincial
43 VIII | indifference~to poetry in Paris. Paris was the fountain-head
44 VIII | indifference~to poetry in Paris. Paris was the fountain-head of
45 VIII | will you find a sister~in Paris who will get up your linen
46 VIII | to have clothes made in Paris, and Paris prices are not
47 VIII | clothes made in Paris, and Paris prices are not like~Angouleme
48 VIII | upon my~entrance on life in Paris through the Marquise d'Espard'
49 VIII | that~he ought to go to Paris at once?"~ ~David took Eve'
50 VIII | fate~awaiting Lucien in Paris.~ ~ ~ ~
51 Addendum| Distinguished Provincial at Paris and details the further
52 Addendum| Distinguished Provincial at Paris~Scenes from a Courtesan'
53 Addendum| Distinguished Provincial at Paris~The Government Clerks~ ~
54 Addendum| Distinguished Provincial at Paris~ ~Grozier, Abbe~The Commission
55 Addendum| Distinguished Provincial at Paris~Another Study of Woman~Pierrette~
56 Addendum| Distinguished Provincial at Paris~ ~Petit-Claud~Eve and David~ ~
57 Addendum| Distinguished Provincial at Paris~The Government Clerks~Ursule
58 Addendum| Distinguished Provincial At Paris~Scenes from a Courtesan'
59 Addendum| Distinguished Provincial At Paris~Scenes from a Courtesan'
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