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1 I | in jest, "I am one of the~men who gave themselves to be
2 I | higher favor than the brave men who had protested, sword
3 II | from among the many young men whom her~father's politics
4 II | sixtieth year--an~age when men rarely renounce their convictions--
5 II | Napoleon had fused things and men. The~legitimate King, who
6 II | right of the distinguished~men of the third estate.~ ~These
7 II | collect~the elite of marrying men about his youngest daughter.
8 III | Among the young marrying men have~you noticed Monsieur
9 III | fair. I don't like fair men."~ ~"Well, then, Monsieur
10 III | might work a miracle, for men often marry for love in~
11 III | man of rank, those young men~will have, perhaps, to you
12 IV | either; so that if~you refuse men of wealth who have not titles,
13 IV | indeed, were some young men who look as though they
14 IV | Byron, and some other great men, for the sole~purpose of
15 V | the pressing politeness of men of the old~court.~ ~"Why,
16 V | in my time, no two young men could be intimate till they~
17 V | But I do not hinder young men from being revolutionary,
18 VI | liberty have spoilt the young men. You have no Guimard~now,
19 VI | judge of this phoenix of~men, who had earned honorable
20 VI | to excite the jealousy of men. Emilie,~had, indeed, an
21 VII | throat, poor innocent.~Young men are very simple-minded nowadays!
22 VII | paradoxes, heaping on all men engaged in trade the bitterest
23 VIII| delicately judicious that the men who were most~interested
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