Part, Chapter
1 I, I | new frock. Do you think it pretty?”~“Charming, and perfectly
2 I, I | admired, quite content to be pretty and to please him.~No longer
3 I, I | a strange thing! What a pretty little member, intelligent
4 I, I | You did well. It was pretty, but not exceptional. Good-by,
5 I, I | known for a long time this pretty woman, blond and black,
6 I, I | smile said: That is very pretty; I am glad to hear it! However,
7 I, I | the capricious teeth of a pretty woman.~He felt a desire
8 I, I | women that passed him, how pretty and charming she was. Like
9 I, II | was only beginning to be pretty—made both appear charming.~
10 I, III| various kinds, useless, pretty, and costly, lay scattered
11 I, III| of the world. This was a pretty little new person, ready
12 I, III| woman who had remained so pretty, rocked in that landau,
13 I, III| hope that you may become as pretty as she.”~“Pooh! pooh!” said
14 I, III| excited at the idea of all the pretty creatures that walked the
15 I, III| always find a young girl, as pretty as an angel, to love him.”~
16 I, III| Do you believe that a pretty little creature of twenty,
17 I, III| asked Bertin. “It is a very pretty place; we will look at the
18 I, III| foamed and rolled over the pretty rocks; a tree, truncated
19 I, III| tastes. She admitted, with pretty naivete, that she had hopes
20 I, III| boiling water steamed in a pretty, shining kettle over the
21 I, IV | some ingenious pose, how pretty both were and how much they
22 II, I | that I could make a very~pretty portrait of your daughter.
23 II, II | with the complacency of a pretty woman the agreeable events
24 II, II | continually.~“Heavens, now pretty she is in black!” he said.~
25 II, II | they were, innumerable, pretty, all different, destined
26 II, II | the Countess:~“Isn’t she pretty like that, and fresh as
27 II, II | cornflower,” said she, “it is so pretty.”~“The cornflower it shall
28 II, II | past! Her laughter, her pretty ways, her motions, brought
29 II, II | the grass, she had grown pretty under the shade of the walls
30 II, III| kingdom, the house of a pretty woman, where she will permit
31 II, III| should make her plain or pretty. If she were ugly she would
32 II, III| contain more philosophy. If pretty, she would be more seductive,
33 II, III| him. The Reveuse should be pretty, and therefore might realize
34 II, IV | always did, finding her pretty. Then he felt the mother’
35 II, IV | insensibly and sweetly, in this pretty work of selection, more
36 II, IV | emotion which the passing of a pretty woman leaves in a crowd
37 II, IV | and she thought: “I was as pretty as she, if not prettier.”
38 II, IV | his house, so fresh, so pretty, so sure of being loved!~“
39 II, VI | her lorgnette. “That is a pretty debut,” said Bertin to himself.~
40 II, VI | fairy spectacle, filled with pretty little songs, and actors
41 II, VI | That man in a doublet, that pretty youth with his roulades,
42 II, VI | full of charm and when the pretty blonde Marguerite replied
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