Part, Chapter
1 I,II | complained, the head~clerk would smile with a jovial air, and say,--~ ~"
2 I,II | His lips~wore the cordial smile which shopkeepers put on
3 I,IV | giving him a glance and a smile intended to~express pity
4 I,IV | the old fellow with a sour~smile; "but when you come to letting
5 I,IV | the umbrella-man made him~smile agreeably, and he bowed
6 I,V | is furious to--"~ ~With a smile of incredulity, Pillerault
7 I,V | gentle nature; she loved the smile,~partly mournful, with which
8 I,V | nonsense which made him smile filled her with repulsion;
9 I,VI | pretentious, and smiling, with the smile he formerly wore when he~
10 I,VII| said Cesarine, with an arch smile.~ ~"Gaudissart! Gaudissart!"
11 I,III| judge and Pillerault to smile, and reminded the unhappy
12 I,IV | at his wife he saw a soft smile~upon her lips; and thus
13 I,IV | attentively, with a soft smile~upon her lips,--the smile
14 I,IV | smile~upon her lips,--the smile which proves that women
15 I,V | Gigonnet, with a~flattering smile.~ ~"Well, suppose I endorse
16 I,VII| bringing to~his lips a single smile. She whispered a few words
17 I,VII| in three years, a genuine smile on the face of~his poor
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