Part, Chapter
1 I,II | instinct. The recital of the virtuous deeds of Louis XVI., the~
2 I,II | desertion, Cesar had remained virtuous, as much through~fear of
3 I,II | woman, whose bearing was virtuous and full of dignity. At~
4 I,III| suffuses the tissues of a virtuous man and~stamps them, as
5 I,III| secret infirmity which a~virtuous queen of France innocently
6 I,V | Anselme, brought up by virtuous people, by the Ragons, models
7 I,VI | quite likely to alarm these virtuous and~worthy people; he therefore
8 I,VI | now among moral people,~virtuous people; and you are not
9 I,VI | recollects gratefully the virtuous magistrate who saved the
10 I,VI | six~pounders, too!"~ ~The virtuous magistrate was now asking
11 I,VI | my friend Popinot is a~virtuous young man; he is going with
12 I,VII| social conventions,--that virtuous middle-class which brings
13 I,I | under the sun),--that the virtuous Claparon~is on the verge
14 I,I | who think ourselves~so virtuous, know how we shall end.
15 I,III| thoughtless word, a eulogy, a virtuous~recognition,--by the kind-heartedness,
16 I,III| Paris the honorable and virtuous~merchant who had caught
17 I,IV | Gobseck! in the name of virtuous folly,~who told you to go
18 I,IV | of~integrity to boast of, virtuous men seeking to save their
19 I,V | said Monsieur Loraux, "a virtuous and~gentle wife, a tender
20 I,VI | some other agent /quasi/ virtuous.~ ~During this act of the
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