Chapter
1 I | inner life of this pair~of friends unfitted them for carrying
2 I | the life led by the two friends.~ ~One day early in May,
3 I | So for three years these friends had mingled the destinies
4 I | eyes of either,~for the two friends were lovers and fellow-worshipers.~ ~
5 I | o'clock struck, but the friends felt neither~hunger nor
6 I | stranger, who saluted the friends~politely, and spoke to David.~ ~"
7 I | a position as his~--the friends were like two young swans
8 III | crowded that evening with friends who~came to remonstrate
9 III | that opened out before the friends the fields of literature
10 IV | disfigured the walls of his friends' rooms with a swarm of crude~
11 IV | temper, that his greatest~friends used to draw him out on
12 VI | he had set himself. His friends's kindness and the fury
13 VI | unmixed happiness for the friends. Lucien~was tired of the
14 VI | Now and again the three friends and Mme. Chardon~arranged
15 VI | country towns) some intimate friends of~the house dropped in
16 VIII| some of M.~de Chandour's friends might call you out."~ ~As
17 VIII| sake.~ ~"Eve and her girl friends have been working very hard,
18 VIII| the~circumstances. The two friends went to Marsac, and spent
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