Part, Chapter
1 I,I | perfumery."~ ~"Well, my beauty, yes! Your furniture is
2 I,II | this time cited for her beauty, as was the case in~later
3 I,II | vigorously smitten by the beauty of Constance~that he rushed
4 I,II | Her cold but ingenuous beauty, her~touching expression,
5 I,II | counter. Her celebrated beauty had an enormous influence
6 I,II | or the Art of Preserving Beauty." He picked up the so-called
7 I,II | called it the 'Friend of Beauty.'~ ~"Eau-de-Cologne is,
8 I,II | shine with a last lustre of~beauty, remarked upon at the time
9 I,III| qualities which are the~beauty of youth; good and affectionate,
10 I,III| of the perfumer and the beauty of the~daughter were immense
11 I,III| queen so celebrated for the beauty of her hair; the king--no
12 I,IV | surprised and taken~aback at the beauty of Cesarine. Just out of
13 I,IV | minutiae of~their toilet. The beauty of this young girl was not
14 I,IV | this young girl was not the beauty of an~English lady, nor
15 I,IV | but the round and glowing~beauty of a Flemish Rubens. Cesarine
16 I,IV | a vigorous and enticing beauty, now lost~however in a vast
17 I,V | one of those faces whose beauty shines from the inner~to
18 I,VII| this charming woman, whose beauty had all the~delicacy of
19 I,VII| Madame Rabourdin, whose beauty, dress, and manners were
20 I,VII| visions of supernatural beauty, shapes of~an incomparable
21 I,VII| his brave~wife, whose only beauty now was that of cities through
22 I,VII| in~all its coquetry, the beauty of the day, the charm of
23 I,VII| months I have blasted that beauty,--my~pride, my legitimate
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