Chapter
1 I | colossal figures who make women turn around in the streets
2 I | card playing, because the women are compliant, and the men
3 I | ordinary French guests. Their women are always pretty, with
4 I | like ourselves. As for the women, she has culled the best
5 I | he was among respectable women!” They had reached the avenue
6 I | of flowers, perfumes, and women; and a composed and continuous
7 I | drawing-room was filled with women. The first thing which attracted
8 I | and fleeting glance which women use to show that they are
9 I | parlor where we now are, women, the temples of the fleshly,
10 I | serious expression, and the women with a fixed smile on their
11 I | with quick little steps as women do in crowds, and called
12 I | interesting, but I fancy the women’s side of it more than the
13 I | the men’s.”~“Indeed! Those women are the best of the tribe
14 II | alone by themselves. The two women seemed entirely different
15 II | Mamma says that decent women cannot go to the place.
16 II | with their families, the women dressed in their best and
17 II | board were many men and women drinking at tables, or else
18 II | their bronzed skin. The women in the boats, in blue or
19 II | as a man does to certain women the first time he meets
20 II | character.~She was one of those women who are created to love
21 III| imitation and assimilation which women possess, and not from a
22 III| contempt for mankind, including women, a very deep sentiment of
23 III| give my opinion about the women.”~“About none of them?”~“
24 III| the two men and the two women mute.~When the covers were
25 III| read so many books in which women, even mothers, had overstepped
26 III| and we will live as honest women, somewhere very far away.
27 III| proud of it; the ‘honest women’ are not as good as I am.”~
28 III| themselves, your ‘honest women.’ They are worse, because
29 IV | mob gathered behind them. Women in white aprons looked on
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