Part, Chapter
1 I,I | touched,~though, like all women, she made use of the love
2 I,I | Good God! how queer women are sometimes, and how they
3 I,I | a speculator in land.~We women have instincts which do
4 I,I | peace, men are more with women, and~women don't like bald-heads;
5 I,I | are more with women, and~women don't like bald-heads; hey!
6 I,II | certain symptoms known to women, that he came more for~the
7 I,II | sense of honor natural to women, by an~excessive love of
8 I,II | one~attraction the more to women, and to men a means of seduction~
9 I,II | which can be~employed by women in all stages of their toilet,
10 I,II | say /ormoires/, because~women put away their gold and
11 I,II | superior in their own line.~The women vied with each other in
12 I,II | perfumer in a community where~women are much inclined to complain
13 I,II | nor the actors, nor the women, nor the writers in the~
14 I,III| was one of those mad-cap women who care nothing as to where
15 I,IV | which invariably come from women.~ ~"Well," said Birotteau, "
16 I,IV | dress from the elegant young women who~came to the shop, and
17 I,IV | a fool I am to listen to women's notions! I'll speak of
18 I,IV | said Birotteau, "more women's notions!"~ ~"--without
19 I,IV | immoral artist, had brought in women of bad lives, and made the~
20 I,V | bachelors on whom married women draw at sight for their
21 I,V | work; but his respect for women~was so great that he would
22 I,V | like men who can't have~women, he is furious to--"~ ~With
23 I,V | between tall and beautiful women and~puny men, or between
24 I,VI | circumference, like~those of elderly women who have known sorrow. The
25 I,VII| With the exception~of three women who severally represented
26 I,VII| assemblage,--all the other women wore heavy, over-~loaded
27 I,VII| graces of the three other women.~ ~The bourgeoisie of the
28 I,VII| to~obliterate it. These women, embarrassed by their fine
29 I,VII| busy lives; while the three women, who each~represented a
30 I,VII| angularities~of the old women, who good-naturedly join
31 I,VII| excites laughter; the young women grow~volatile, and a few
32 I,VII| country~dance, and some of the women beat their hands together
33 I,I | much more. There are some women to whom nothing is sacred:
34 I,III| beside Anselme;~for all women, be they fools or saints,
35 I,III| Year's gift!"~ ~The two women, unable to see him in the
36 I,IV | have~always loved Italian women. Did you ever have an Italian
37 I,IV | Derville and Pillerault. The women left the room to go and
38 I,IV | smile which proves that women are nearer than men~to angelic
39 I,V | what you~earn; your two women will have fifteen hundred
40 I,V | makes the~commonest market women respectful.~ ~"Do you want
41 I,V | perfumery.~ ~"Learn to respect women, my angel," she said, "and
42 I,V | pretty kittenish grace which women only display to~perfection
43 I,VI | were at liberty, the two women went to fetch Cesar~at the
44 I,VII| his salon, his guests, the women in their ball-~dresses,
45 I,VII| followed by the guests and the women in their~ball-dresses, who
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