Part, Chapter
1 I, I | artists and fashionable people, no matter how much they
2 I, I | exchanging observations on the people that both knew; then they
3 I, I | with me!” She was glad when people praised his talent, and
4 I, I | houses, the pedestrians, people in cabs and omnibuses, with
5 I, I | express his opinion on the people he had seen, the houses
6 I, II | intelligence of fashionable people, even the brightest of them,
7 I, II | he compared fashionable people to race-horses, which, in
8 I, II | the theaters of the common people—there you will see laughter.
9 I, II | all artists try to make people believe that chalk is cheese.~
10 I, III| thought, or supposed of these people, as they defiled before
11 I, III| grassy lawns, throngs of people, sitting on iron chairs,
12 I, III| artificial place where city people go to look at flowers grown
13 I, III| would say; “Badly dressed people are horrible in it.” He
14 I, III| walk.~He looked at the poor people sitting on benches, for
15 I, III| those shameful lies which people of their world ought neither
16 I, IV | together and filled with people eating, extended in long
17 I, IV | suddenly, forgetting the young people in remembering his anxiety
18 II, I | amusing~myself by looking at people and things, and enjoying
19 II, I | powerless and useless. The people~that pass have no more sense
20 II, I | thousand details of what people had been doing and saying;
21 II, IV | light, amid this stream of people, seen by all those men who
22 II, V | affection between the young people, and to keep the two men
23 II, V | He looked around at these people who were now chatting again,
24 II, VI | chandelier, a throng of people were seating themselves
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