Chap.

 1        1|          all the light ladies in Paris? Nana is an invention of
 2        1|          finish his education in Paris. The manager took the young
 3        1|      exchanging salutations. All Paris was there, the Paris of
 4        1|         All Paris was there, the Paris of literature, of finance
 5        1|       this famous Nana with whom Paris had been occupying itself
 6        1|    Faloise kept reiterating, for Paris still astonished him.~The
 7        1|          civility. “The whole of Paris will visit your theater.”~
 8        2|         come to pass a winter in Paris, had installed her there
 9        2|       own recital, as though all Paris had been shaken to the ground
10        2|       life I got what the men in Paris had spent on flowers for
11        3|         heads who were coming to Paris for the exhibition. Several
12        3|          give balls to which all Paris should run. Behind her seat
13        3|         one of the best known in Paris, cost him a fabulous amount
14        3|     representative of Prussia in Paris. There’s a man now whose
15        3|         a small establishment in Paris in a house belonging to
16        3|   Fondettes.~“Philippe is not in Paris?” asked Count Muffat.~“Dear
17        3|          world was this world of Paris! The most rigid circles
18        3|        journalist, “it’s because Paris has done with her.”~Vandeuvres,
19        4|       estate on the pavements of Paris, not to mention Tatan Nene,
20        4|  assumption of the veil of which Paris was still talking, Nana
21        4|          foreigners rushing into Paris! In the long run, perhaps,
22        4|      wooden shoes. As she viewed Paris thus grimly awakening, she
23        5|         thighs and bosoms in all Paris. She wore everlastingly
24        6|      which leads from Orleans to Paris and with its rich verdure
25        6|           The coffee was served. Paris was now the subject of conversation,
26        6|  promised to be kind, but not in Paris, and to him, too, she named
27        6|         railway carriage between Paris and Orleans she spoke of
28        6|         annoyance at having left Paris in such a hurry, sat stiffly
29        6|       blowouts you might give in Paris if you had a dining room
30        6|        slipshod workgirl on the Paris pavements. The rain redoubled,
31        6|        of being scolded, like in Paris, when I come and see you
32        6|        to her as if she had left Paris twenty years ago. Yesterday’
33        6|          Then they chatted about Paris: business there was at a
34        6|        been obliged to run up to Paris. He was told that Madame
35        6|     ladies must really return to Paris, where the season was surpassing
36        6|       was obstinate. She loathed Paris; she wouldnt set foot there
37        6|     anxious to take Lucy back to Paris with him. He was amused
38        6|   tomorrow. We are going back to Paris.”~And she went to bed with
39        7|         tinsel of the ARTICLE DE PARIS, the false jewelry, the
40        7|          and on the pavements of Paris, and tall, handsome and
41        7|    corrupts and disorganizes all Paris, churning it between her
42        7|  prevented her from returning to Paris the night before and passing
43        7|         so melancholy from muddy Paris pavements. Muffat had returned
44        7|        he went. The awakening of Paris, with its gangs of sweepers
45        7|        man who had rushed across Paris with good news, only to
46        8|          it, that gentlemen from Paris swung you in swings and
47        8|         the only corner of night Paris which was still alight and
48        8|        madness were passing over Paris. The girl was rather nervous
49        8|          ought to be going on in Paris between nine oclock in
50        9|      presents! You might give me Paris, and yet I should say no!
51        9|         Yes, I’ll finelady your Paris for you, I will!”~
52       10|        trampled upon a prostrate Paris like a sovereign whom none
53       10|    occupied the attention of all Paris. And amid this great wealth
54       10|     courtesan, whom the world of Paris desired. He, too, accepted
55       10|        can have his day and that Paris is aware of it.~From that
56       10|      arms, for she hurried up to Paris and came and sought aid
57       10|    taking a rich foreigner about Paris. Muffat, however, led him
58       10|        to the troubles agitating Paris, the incendiary articles
59       10|       imminent ruin, about which Paris was already talking. The
60       10|         training for the Prix de Paris. He was living on this horse,
61       10|           desolate plains of new Paris. But Nana silenced Satin.~“
62       10|       girl once upon a time: all Paris had talked of her beauty.
63       11|       race for the Grand Prix de Paris was being run in the Bois
64       11|       Gaite, and we’ll gobble up Paris between us. You certainly
65       11|       prize given by the city of Paris had just been run for, and
66       11|         of temper. No one in the Paris of pleasure or of society
67       11|      while very far away, on the Paris side, the nonpaying public,
68       11|          which made her queen of Paris. All the other ladies were
69       11|   occupying the attention of all Paris, interested her beyond measure.
70       12|          of the countess amusing Paris with his remarks about Nana?
71       12|          Avenue de Villiers; all Paris is talking about it. Good
72       13|  existence when Nana flared upon Paris with redoubled splendor.
73       13|        throne, an altar, whither Paris was to come in order to
74       13|        ten oclock and traversed Paris, wandered up and down on
75       13|         things which kept her in Paris in constant dread of some
76       13|          and brilliant luxury of Paris. Duchesses pointed her out
77       13|      Nana? But, my dear sir, all Paris would be laughing at you.
78       13|         old man who had squeezed Paris for twenty years, brought
79       13|       lacking. In two months all Paris would be talking of him,
80       13|        speed to the other end of Paris in order to be alone and
81       13|        with a desire to astonish Paris, he had been slyly projecting
82       13|     forthwith. He was not due in Paris till the day after tomorrow,
83       13|         fearful scandal, and all Paris was already talking about
84       13|         of engineers, had shaken Paris to its foundations and had
85       14|        francs. For the last time Paris had seen her in a fairy
86       14| flamelike skin and hair of hers. Paris would always picture her
87       14|       who were hurrying to leave Paris amid the panic caused by
88       14|       let myself be massacred in Paris.”~Her mother, as became
89       14|        Was business doing badly? Paris would never enjoy itself
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