Part, Chapter
1 I,I | Down with wigs!'--the effect will be prodigious. You
2 I,II | on Cesar an overpowering effect. On a fine June day, crossing~
3 I,II | first time, had a magical effect. Not only all France,~but
4 I,II | well known already for its~effect in arresting the ravages
5 I,II | before it was carried into effect, on a Saturday night when~
6 I,II | productive powers with full~effect, is common not only to organized
7 I,II | individual life? /When the effect~produced is no longer in
8 I,V | only oil that has~any real effect upon hair. No perfumer has
9 I,V | this man has a chemical~effect upon me; his voice heats
10 I,V | phenomena which produce the same effect. Probably headaches and
11 I,V | the hair; otherwise the effect might be~lost."~ ~"Recollect
12 I,V | and liked to watch the effect her own glance had upon~
13 I,VI | Charles Claparon very much the~effect that his new clothes produced
14 I,VI | ideas, and the obfuscating effect~of a shop and a counting-room,
15 I,VII| were all heightened in effect by the rich material and
16 I,VII| their~jewels, nor to the effect which they themselves produced;
17 I,VII| his simple being the same effect that~this fecund harmony
18 I,VII| harmony wrought in theirs,--an effect to which the~symphony in
19 I,III| satin, heightened in~its effect by folds of white satin;
20 I,III| occasions. Du Tillet enjoyed the effect. His hatred towards~the
21 I,III| surprisingly harmonious effect as~it lay on the hard little
22 I,VI | relating to~bankruptcy. The effect of all laws which touch
23 I,VII| with a~sacred and admiring effect which touched Constance
24 I,VII| it is to produce a solemn effect. It rises, beyond~the outer
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