Chapter
1 I | a trifle on one side, as men will carelessly wear them
2 I | gallantry peculiar to certain men.~A true Parisian, furthermore,
3 I | women are compliant, and the men dishonest. I love that social
4 I | seductiveness which drives men to folly, an unwholesome,
5 I | You even meet very decent men there, like ourselves. As
6 I | couples were whirling-the men with a serious expression,
7 I | she pointed out a group of men who were looking at them
8 I | each table stood a group of men, looking on. There was very
9 I | the human voices.~All the men were decorated with various
10 I | side of it more than the men’s.”~“Indeed! Those women
11 II | bank. On board were many men and women drinking at tables,
12 II | and the noise. The young men gazed at her, crowded against
13 II | undisturbed. The two young men left by the ten o’clock
14 II | had told her of how many men she had dreamed whole nights
15 II | intentions, for she knew men by experience, and especially
16 II | experience, and especially men of that set. So at the first
17 III| vague, seemed to illumine men and things around her in
18 III| mother, while the two young men, astride folding-chairs,
19 III| seemed to make the two men and the two women mute.~
20 III| her hand to the two young men, and withdrew.~As her room
21 IV | by the thought that these men had come to amuse themselves
22 IV | Marly jeered at them. The men on the platforms cried:~“
23 IV | Girls applauded; young men jeered, and a stout gentleman
24 IV | booths. She forced all her men to get weighed among a crowd
25 IV | of the two wearied young men, who also had stopped the
26 IV | what has she done?”~The men, frightened, moved about
27 IV | way. But seeing all the men with their eyes fixed on
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