Part, Chapter
1 I,II | Carried~away by the fervor of youth, electrified by his intercourse
2 I,II | which only~come in early youth; he intended to marry in
3 I,II | one knew from whence this youth~had derived the immense
4 I,III| the charm of his modest youth and the~shyness which grew
5 I,III| which are the~beauty of youth; good and affectionate,
6 I,III| became his desires. Happy the youth~who in those levelling days
7 I,III| nothing tired him. Love, in a youth of~twenty, feeds on devotion.~ ~"
8 I,III| in the burgeoning~time of youth.~ ~"Popinot," said the worthy
9 I,III| looking~fixedly at the youth. "Do you feel within you
10 I,IV | natural that every ambitious youth of that calling,~returning
11 I,IV | pastel,--Molineux in his youth. There were also books,
12 I,V | tendencies, so~attractive in youth, had repeatedly sung his
13 I,III| in his ear.~ ~"Folly of youth," said Birotteau, assuming
14 I,VII| happiest day of~all his youth, loosened the tight chords
15 I,VII| honor, to make him pass his youth eating dry bread with the
16 I,VII| conservative bonds by accustoming youth to the practice of pitiless~
17 I,VII| friends.~ ~It is a fault of youth to think the whole world
18 I,VII| derived from its virtues. Youth sees neither men nor~things
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