Les Misérables (novel)/Source/Volume 1/Book 3/Chapter 3: Difference between revisions

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<noinclude>{{work}}</noinclude>==== CHAPTER III—Four and Four ====
 
==== CHAPTER III—Four and Four ====
 
It is hard nowadays to picture to one’s self what a pleasure-trip of students and grisettes to the country was like, forty-five years ago. The suburbs of Paris are no longer the same; the physiognomy of what may be called circumparisian life has changed completely in the last half-century; where there was the cuckoo, there is the railway car; where there was a tender-boat, there is now the steamboat; people speak of Fécamp nowadays as they spoke of Saint-Cloud in those days. The Paris of 1862 is a city which has France for its outskirts.
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Love is a fault; so be it. Fantine was innocence floating high over fault.
 
 
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