Part, Chapter
1 I,I | pours oil on the head of her~lover; pretty, isn't it? The safest
2 I,II | made soft eyes at~her. The lover was backed up in his suit
3 I,III| courtesan treats an elderly lover. Roguin soon found his wife
4 I,III| threatened to~renounce her lover if he limited her luxuries.
5 I,III| that chair, and let the lover give~place to the clerk.
6 I,III| introduces a king of Comagene, lover of the~queen so celebrated
7 I,III| worthy soul had flattered the lover by~this confidence, and
8 I,V | Cesarine was there.~ ~The lover had never yet perceived
9 I,V | flattering whatever be the lover's age, or rank, or personal~
10 I,V | and the right leg of her lover, and was even~capable of
11 I,VI | still in Paris sent the lover flying into the Rue~des
12 I,VI | Popinot.~ ~"Oil Cesarine?--Ah, lover! would you flatter both
13 I,VII| almost unprecedented. The lover~promised that no matter
14 I,VII| bourgeoisie. Matifat, a passionate lover of the stage, had a slight~
15 I,VII| roundabout terms of a timid lover.~ ~"My fortune depends on
16 I,IV | out of~sight. Cesarine's lover heard that dreadful charge
17 I,VII| prosperous, full of hope, the lover of a girl as beautiful as
18 I,VII| is very certain that the lover of Cesarine felt an instinctive~
19 I,VII| the natural~eagerness of a lover on the threshold of his
20 I,VII| thoughts~which surged in the lover's brain that he resolved
21 I,VII| philosopher to the happy lover; "he can~never carry all
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