Part, Chapter
1 I,I | in the grand symphony~of Parisian uproar, which occurs about
2 I,I | me make you rich. For a~Parisian girl you have no ambition!
3 I,II | him certain mysteries of Parisian life, which she made~him
4 I,II | over in silence the~joys of Parisian love tasted with innocence,
5 I,II | seduce so~many youthful Parisian imaginations. Constance,
6 I,II | way to dinner,--for the Parisian lounger is~as often a man
7 I,II | to~the insipid face of a Parisian bourgeois. Without this
8 I,III| himself, the scion of an old Parisian family! In spite of all
9 I,III| expensive, and like other Parisian husbands he set up a private~
10 I,IV | lymphatic~atmosphere of a Parisian shop, where the air stagnates
11 I,IV | He knew all the~tricks of Parisian legislation in the matter
12 I,V | drags down so many of the~Parisian bourgeoisie. He kept up
13 I,VI | take commissions from the Parisian~perfumers."~ ~"Why?"~ ~"
14 I,I | greater number of the petty Parisian~tradesmen, disturbed for
15 I,II | to serve the interests of Parisian~commerce,--with the view,
16 I,II | tongue-battery." In those days Parisian newspapers ruled the~departments,
17 I,II | Cephalic~Oil triumph in Parisian opinion, thanks to Finot'
18 I,III| thousand~francs through Parisian commerce: it should be the
19 I,III| guardian and~protector of Parisian commerce."~ ~Adolphe smiled,
20 I,III| courtyard.~ ~According to Parisian custom, notes were paid
21 I,III| best known manufacturers of Parisian perfumery; he wishes to~
22 I,V | that ever resounded in a~Parisian perfumery.~ ~"Learn to respect
23 I,VI | opposition. The majority of Parisian failures stop short at~this
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