Part, Chapter
1 I,I | you think I~don't love my country? I wish to show the liberals,
2 I,I | has paid his debt to his country by merely~selling perfumery
3 I,II | body and soul, for his country.~ ~On the 18th Brumaire,
4 I,II | theatre, Sunday jaunts to the~country in hackney-coaches. Without
5 I,II | the things of their~own country. A French merchant must
6 I,III| into an affair in a~foreign country. It chanced that an auditor
7 I,III| They have treated~me like a country doctor,--fetched me in a
8 I,III| ill-luck to belong to our own country. Come, Popinot, have you
9 I,III| flattery--gave the name to his country. What wit and~intellect
10 I,V | for their amusements,--a~country jaunt, the opera, the Montagnes-Beaujon, /
11 I,VII| figures of the interminable country~dance, and some of the women
12 I,I | prefer to run out of the country. I sha'n't commit such~a
13 I,II | mercantile success in the country regions, so likewise did
14 I,III| Adolphe had gone~into the country to look at a piece of property
15 I,IV | that he had gone into the country with Madame Roguin. He took~
16 I,V | the~king, but to love your country was the exclusive privilege
17 I,VI | France; he has inundated the country with placards~and prospectuses;
18 I,VII| we are~all going into the country, and you must come."~ ~Cesar,
19 Add | Classes~Cousin Betty~The Country Parson~In addition, M. Bianchon
20 Add | Vendetta~Jealousies of a Country Town~Scenes from a Courtesan'
21 Add | the Valley~Jealousies of a Country Town~The Gondreville Mystery~
22 Add | Vendetta~Jealousies of a Country Town~ ~Thouvenin~Cousin
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