Part, Chapter
1 I,I | and I shall retire solid bourgeois of Paris, with fifteen thousand~
2 I,II | perfumery, and live like honest~bourgeois without meddling in politics.
3 I,II | blunders, and opinions of the bourgeois of Paris, who admires Moliere,~
4 I,II | explain the~bearings of the bourgeois intellect. A poet passing
5 I,II | insipid face of a Parisian bourgeois. Without this air of naive~
6 I,III| Among men the most chaste of bourgeois have the ambition to appear~
7 I,IV | this worthy specimen of the bourgeois class, the constant~butt
8 I,IV | would rather work for a bourgeois than~for the King of Prussia,
9 I,IV | the sign of~the thoroughly bourgeois life. Sooner or later she
10 I,IV | what the papers say,"--the~bourgeois, essentially the friend
11 I,IV | the things which make a bourgeois laugh; talked~of what others
12 I,IV | respects one of those estimable bourgeois~who solemnly put Christmas
13 I,V | were extremely wild for a~bourgeois.~ ~"Be respectful, Anselme,"
14 I,VII| stories of~people who came to bourgeois balls, claiming friends
15 I,VII| on the peaceful ground of bourgeois vanity. It was arranged
16 I,VII| particulars,--an art of which the bourgeois mind is ignorant, though~
17 I,VII| richness~which gives to the bourgeois masses their vulgar aspect,
18 I,VII| from their garlands. The bourgeois~Momus appears, followed
19 I,III| the innocent by-play of bourgeois love. The Matifats joined
20 I,IV | tarnish the soul of the honest bourgeois as~though he came from a
21 I,VII| laughed, but which these good bourgeois~thought quite natural.~ ~
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