Part, Chapter
1 I,I | eyes staring and fixed, her hair quivering, her ears filled~
2 I,I | essence which will make the hair grow--an Oil Comagene, from
3 I,I | souls inside out to get hair, if~they haven't any. For
4 I,I | drugs which are said to dye~hair or make it grow. Since the
5 I,I | composition which will~keep the hair in good health will sell
6 I,I | now engaged in analyzing hair: Chiffreville, his~associate
7 I,I | Popinot has the finest head of hair in the world.~A shop-girl
8 I,I | world.~A shop-girl with hair long enough to touch the
9 I,II | travelling cudgel. If his hair was cut~like that of a choir-boy,
10 I,II | complexion. His abundant black hair, his solid neck and~shoulders
11 I,II | defects of race; and his~hair, of a tint like hair that
12 I,II | his~hair, of a tint like hair that has been dyed black,
13 I,II | silvered the thick tufts of hair on which the pressure of
14 I,II | His forehead, where the hair grew in a way to mark~five
15 I,III| belongs to persons with red hair; but his~clear brow, his
16 I,III| stimulate the growth of hair, to~titillate the scalp,
17 I,III| coma/, which signifies 'hair,' as Monsieur Alibert,~the
18 I,III| celebrated for the beauty of her hair; the king--no doubt as~a
19 I,III| studying the composition of hair; he has discovered the nature
20 I,III| also the structure of the hair~itself. The secret is just
21 I,III| But he is lame, and his~hair is the color of a warming-pan.
22 I,IV | Transteverine peasant-woman. Her hair,--~which was abundant, and
23 I,V | crowned with silver-gray hair~cut so short that it looked
24 I,V | has~any real effect upon hair. No perfumer has ever dreamed
25 I,V | what it is."~ ~"I know that hair has lately occupied all
26 I,V | of me,--the analysis of~hair?" He took up a little paper. "
27 I,V | monograph on that subject. Hair is composed of a~rather
28 I,V | differences in the color of the hair. Red~hair, for instance,
29 I,V | the color of the hair. Red~hair, for instance, has more
30 I,V | there metals and oils in~hair? Unless I heard it from
31 I,V | Monsieur Vauquelin."~ ~"Hair is produced by a follicular
32 I,V | from the other~springs the hair itself. According to some
33 I,V | Monsieur Blainville, the hair is really a dead~matter
34 I,V | species of pulp."~ ~"Then hair is what you might call threads
35 I,V | But, monsieur, if the hair is still-born, it is impossible
36 I,V | secret about making the hair grow or keeping it from~
37 I,V | alterations in the color of~the hair come from changes in the
38 I,V | use of that~oil for their hair; and the ancients are the
39 I,V | and sold dear--to make~the hair grow."~ ~"My dear Monsieur
40 I,V | slightest action upon the hair; but the Malays buy it up
41 I,V | thinking that it preserves the hair: they don't know~that whale-oil
42 I,V | as I say, can make the hair grow on bald heads; just
43 I,V | serious danger, red or white hair. But in~advertising the
44 I,V | probably preserve~their hair."~ ~"Do you think that the
45 I,V | kindly, "and not to the hair; otherwise the effect might
46 I,V | forgotten what he said~about hair: do you remember it, Popinot!"~ ~"
47 I,V | Yes!~nothing can make the hair grow; Macassar, you lie!
48 I,V | poor lame fellow with red hair. Yet this phenomenon is
49 I,V | lame Anselme, with his red hair, did not despair of~winning
50 I,VI | preservatives of the public hair."~ ~Popinot returned to
51 I,VI | little, dreamed that his hair was~madly growing, and saw
52 I,VI | They must have had fine hair."~ ~"Cesar was bald," said
53 I,VI | traveller possessed not a hair on his head, and wore a~
54 I,VI | drag~them back from that to hair is beyond even my powers
55 I,VI | No cosmetic can make the hair grow, and no chemical preparation~
56 I,VI | made known the fact that hair is a dead substance, and~
57 I,VI | the bulb~from which the hair issues from all deteriorating
58 I,VI | the preservation of the hair was peculiarly precious.
59 I,VI | for the length of their hair, used no other remedy~than
60 I,VI | nor~parched by heat. The hair of the head, that magnificent
61 I,VI | quite useless to oil the~hair; this is not only a vulgar
62 I,VI | oil, and after parting~the hair with the comb, to apply
63 I,VI | hair--can be made--to grow! Hair cannot be dyed without--
64 I,VI | commissions from all the rival hair people; none of them give
65 I,VI | upon hats and heads,~and hair and hair-oil, etc. In the
66 I,VI | Qou-ick/, and good-by to~your hair,"--imitating the fatal knife
67 I,VII| the men are heated,~their hair, lately curled, straggles
68 I,II | impossibility of forcing the~hair to grow and the dangers
69 I,II | certificate of life for dead hair,~offered to all those who
70 I,II | antiquity preserved their hair by the use of Cephalic Oil."~ ~"
71 I,II | ridiculing all those who~thought hair could be made to grow, and
72 I,III| on little~Popinot's thick hair and rubbing it about as
73 I,III| gold fret-work, and her hair, gathered up /a la chinoise/,~
74 I,IV | s hand lightly with her hair~from time to time, as she
75 I,V | to his skull, denuded of hair and of the color of~fresh
76 I,VII| husbands his uniform,--his hair~entirely white, his face
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