Part,  Chapter

 1     I,       I|        1876 when, on my road to Paris, I boarded the St. Gothard
 2     I,       I| travelling on the same train to Paris. He had with him an attendant
 3     I,     III|        rich. He lives mostly in Paris. If it is more convenient
 4     I,     III|     expected when you arrive in Paris, and have no further trouble.
 5     I,      IV|        clock in the morning. In Paris the day has at that early
 6     I,      IV|  luggage one day ahead of me to Paris, and so it had not been
 7     I,      IV|         time of your sojourn in Paris. Promise me to accept of
 8     I,      VI|         de Janeiro, Palermo, or Paris - and from this, after a
 9    II,      XI|          and we shall start for Paris in three days. You had better
10    II,      XI|     same, and send it for me to Paris, as well as the funds I
11    II,      XI|       we were on our journey to Paris. I had taken the Swiss route,
12    II,      XI|         quiet. So we arrived in Paris unmolested; and the great
13    II,      XI|        day after our arrival in Paris the declaration of war which
14    II,      XI| securities are rising in value. Paris is enthusiastic for the
15    II,      XI|      with such certainty that a Paris financier offers, to any
16    II,      XI|     From Brussels I returned to Paris, and procured all the necessary
17    II,      XI|     death reaches that woman in Paris, she will try hard to discover
18    II,    XIII|   breast, and the reporter of a Paris newspaper wrote a flourishing
19    II,    XIII|        thought of that woman in Paris, and what she would think
20    II,    XIII|        cut off from the road to Paris.~ ~In every battle that
21    II,    XIII|       victorious elsewhere. The Paris newspapers and the Bourse
22    II,    XIII|  newspaper, and here it was: - "Paris. Extraordinary Upward Movement!
23    II,    XIII|  journey homeward - that is, to Paris. This was now the speediest
24    II,    XIII|       soot, and read one of the Paris newspapers - the last that
25    II,     XIV|       weather when I arrived in Paris. It had rained for the last
26    II,     XIV|  considerable time to come. The Paris Bourse created an enormous
27    II,      XV|       the normal condition of a Paris street, for in large cities
28    II,      XV|    honest advice. Don't stay in Paris beyond to-day at the utmost.
29    II,      XV|    happy in being able to leave Paris; she had been very uncomfortable
30    II,     XVI|       and refugees fleeing from Paris, and at every station there
31    II,     XVI|        me.~ ~"Did you come from Paris alone?" asked the broker.~ ~"
32    II,     XVI|     Change, as I must be off to Paris."~ ~"Paris? You are going
33    II,     XVI|       must be off to Paris."~ ~"Paris? You are going back to Paris?
34    II,     XVI|    Paris? You are going back to Paris? Sir, your reason must be
35    II,     XVI|    revolution has broken out in Paris. Don't you know of it?"~ ~"
36    II,     XVI|       pictures, and tapestry in Paris, and I am going to take
37    II,     XVI|         me to stay.~ ~I reached Paris much sooner than I had expected.
38    II,     XVI|        in assisting me to reach Paris. The sight of my uniform,
39    II,     XVI|      entirely at my service. In Paris I was surprised at the change
40    II,    XVII|   engaged as horse-tamer in the Paris Hippodrome, and they say
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