Part, Chapter
1 I,I | hein? Do you think I~don't love my country? I wish to show
2 I,I | liberals, my enemies, that~to love the king is to love France."~ ~"
3 I,I | that~to love the king is to love France."~ ~"Do you think
4 I,I | women, she made use of the love she inspired to gain~her
5 I,I | Birotteau," she said, "if you love me, let me be happy in my~
6 I,I | you are not reasonable, my love. Do you think that at thirty-~
7 I,II | to~refuse the offer, when love suddenly changed all his
8 I,II | as silly~as a sheep, and love now made him sillier. He
9 I,II | revealed his~inextinguishable love, that she condescended to
10 I,II | distinguishes a~genuine love.~ ~The rapidity of this
11 I,II | silence the~joys of Parisian love tasted with innocence, the
12 I,II | which made it difficult to love him. The life of~Paris and
13 I,II | the~household linen; who love while scolding, who conceive
14 I,II | to women, by an~excessive love of order, by a fanaticism
15 I,II | Cesar, inspired by his love with an~excessive ambition,
16 I,II | a muslin cage, he makes love like the King of Lahore.
17 I,II | Christian, and~through his love for the only woman he had
18 I,II | that heart there shone one love, the light and~strength
19 I,III| in those who knew him: we love the weak, and Popinot was~
20 I,III| his ambitious desires:~but love gets onward by leaps of
21 I,III| Cesarine, nothing tired him. Love, in a youth of~twenty, feeds
22 I,III| any woman~except my wife. Love is a famous /vehicle/,--
23 I,III| the tribune yesterday."~ ~"Love!" exclaimed Popinot. "Oh,
24 I,III| shoes, the one louis,~and love.~ ~In times gone by, Roguin--
25 I,III| a promise that~she would love Roguin for thirty thousand
26 I,III| good government, and whose love of gambling~renders them
27 I,III| monsieur! have you guessed my love for--"~ ~"For whom?" asked
28 I,III| confidence, and people in love are capable of anything.~ ~"
29 I,III| Suppose Cesarine should love him? But he is lame, and
30 I,IV | The charming girl inspired love without leaving~time to
31 I,IV | little nuts may you want, my love?"~ ~"Six thousand weight."~ ~"
32 I,IV | the heart of the~woman I love best in the world."~ ~"Who
33 I,V | mistress. Delicious sign of love!--which they on~whom chance
34 I,V | but a young man whom I love, and who comes to ask a~
35 I,V | Some moralists hold that love is an involuntary passion,
36 I,V | passions, except~maternal love. This opinion carries with
37 I,V | ignorant of the causes of love, it is none the~less true
38 I,V | sentiment or brutality.~Love is an essentially selfish
39 I,V | girl like Cesarine should love~a poor lame fellow with
40 I,V | and knows better how to love than men of irreproachable~
41 I,V | were beautiful, he would love her~madly to her dying day;
42 I,V | glance at the harvest of~love in her own home, and reasoned
43 I,V | is the proof of a great love.~ ~"Where is he going?"
44 I,VI | ah, there's a woman~I love!--Well, in order to get
45 I,VI | charming. Come here, my love," said Madame Ragon, in
46 I,VI | asked Cesarine.~ ~"No, my love," said Madame Ragon; "Anselme,
47 I,VII| costly to our mutual self-~love."~ ~Cesarine, who thought
48 I,VII| all, ventured to~tell his love to the charming girl, during
49 I,III| cabinet, more redolent of love than finance. Madame Roguin~
50 I,III| hopelessly) bent on making love to Madame Ragon, had~brought
51 I,III| saints, know what is what in love. The~daughter of "The Queen
52 I,III| young people, thrilling with~love, held in whispering voices
53 I,III| think those young~people love each other."~ ~"Well, so
54 I,III| innocent by-play of bourgeois love. The Matifats joined in~
55 I,IV | time. I haven't a moment to love or~to loaf; I have lost
56 I,IV | deputy of~Marseilles, in love with a certain actress then
57 I,IV | me. Remember that if you~love his daughter you must not--
58 I,IV | the very interests of your love you~must not--destroy your
59 I,V | poured forth the eloquence of love, hoping it might seduce
60 I,V | he added. "I know you love Cesarine devotedly, and
61 I,V | can satisfy the claims of love and the claims of commerce."~ ~"
62 I,V | You are worthy of the love of those who have hearts,"
63 I,V | happy at the failure, but love is such an egoist! Even~
64 I,V | patriotism. Royalists might love the~king, but to love your
65 I,V | might love the~king, but to love your country was the exclusive
66 I,VII| lava waves of a volcano. Love alone remained to him!~Cesar'
67 I,VII| heart-rending tones. "You may love without one bitter~thought."~ ~
68 I,VII| and sanctioned pride. I love thee better since I~know
69 I,VII| years of married life~the love of a wife for her husband
70 I,VII| I nurse it with~careful love. I invest the profits; if
71 I,VII| with all the strength that love has given me."~ ~"Will it
72 I,VII| himself, "even if she did love du Tillet, is that~any reason
73 I,VII| killing herself--"~ ~"For love?" said Popinot.~ ~"Yes,"
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