Par.
1 2 | and made humorous remarks that gave him a great reputation
2 7 | With pleasure. You know that I wander about Paris a great
3 7 | sights, at the people, at all that is passing by and all that
4 7 | that is passing by and all that is going on.~
5 10| friends in there, those that one no longer goes to call
6 11| this cemetery of Montmartre that is buried a romance of my
7 12| much noise -- imbeciles that they are~
8 13| all the tortured corpses that are distorted to-day in
9 14| has a degree of grandeur; that of Gautier, of Murger, on
10 15| with sadness, a sadness that is not all pain, a kind
11 15| pain, a kind of sadness that makes you think when you
12 16| solitude and of finality that hovered over this spot which
13 17| began to read the epitaphs. That is the most amusing thing
14 19| to refresh my mind I felt that I would soon have had enough
15 19| have had enough of it and that I must place the faithful
16 21| willow, led me to suppose that she was going to cry. She
17 23| saw by her first glance that she would be polite and
18 41| That sounded sincere. It sounded
19 41| the cab we sat so close that our shoulders touched.~
20 44| Come in a few moments so that I may thank you.'~
21 46| was delighted, thinking that this maid probably came
22 47| and her eyes were so clear that I was terribly tempted.
23 50| killed in Tonquin, I saw that she had a languid, resigned
24 50| languid, resigned expression that set my mind at rest.~
25 62| journey. She made me promise that I would come and see her
26 70| know whose widow she was on that special day."~
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