Chapter
1 I | as yet in general use in small provincial~printing establishments.
2 I | this chronicle of great small things.~ ~Sechard had been
3 I | costs more to move; or, if small type was under discussion,~
4 I | vast deal of oil~to a very small piece of wick; for excess
5 I | indeed to maintain it in a small way,~lest it should fall
6 II | upon his~wife's property, a small estate in the neighborhood
7 II | away upon the~infinitely small objects which it strives
8 III | the pillars of society, small wonder that~society, finding
9 IV | apprenticeship in the~practice of the small deceits with which the lover
10 IV | his~physical wants, the small sensations which did duty
11 IV | families belonged to the very~small minority who hold themselves
12 VI | are beginning to prefer small~pictures because they have
13 VI | Lucien, and treated him with small, patronizing airs.~ ~"Yes,
14 VI | the face of things in a small town.~ ~Lucien and Louise
15 VI | unfrequently happens in small country towns) some intimate
16 VII | Stanislas, and~formed a small, secret committee in a corner
17 VIII| In our position, and in a small town,~absence is the only
18 VIII| his manuscript made up so~small a package that to hide it
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