Part, Chapter
1 I, I | one of those brilliant, fashionable artists one meets in the
2 I, I | consideration of the demands of fashionable modern elegance, she had
3 I, I | and familiar details of fashionable life. The little rivalries,
4 I, I | made him considered by the fashionable world the first portrait
5 I, I | showed himself very reserved. Fashionable women made him a little
6 I, I | frequented. He went into the fashionable world for the glory of it,
7 I, I | unity between artists and fashionable people, no matter how much
8 I, I | forgotten his prejudices against fashionable women, and would willingly
9 I, I | easily awakened desires, fashionable women, whose modesty is
10 I, II | him greatly appreciated by fashionable women, whom he served as
11 I, II | brought them in contact with fashionable persons, and enjoyed presenting
12 I, II | mysterious function of fusing the fashionable and the artistic worlds,
13 I, II | method employed by all the fashionable women of the day. One must
14 I, II | how the intelligence of fashionable people, even the brightest
15 I, II | concluding, he compared fashionable people to race-horses, which,
16 I, III| given them by the customs of fashionable society, they had grown
17 I, III| coquettish, frivolous, and fashionable, shivered under its chill.
18 I, IV | artistic Paris invites all fashionable Paris to be present at the
19 II, III| one of those dignified, fashionable physicians whose decorations
20 II, VI | and from them alighted fashionable and other women, in their
21 II, VI | the intelligence of the fashionable world, those ignorant and
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