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1 1 | lives in the memory of~the people,as in Brittany, where the
2 2 | hatred for England.~ ~The people of Guerande feigned utter
3 2 | character of these two old~people (for the sister lived only
4 4 | grew~late, these excellent people would be forced to separate
5 4 | the rector. The four old people had gone to~their beds.
6 5 | Catholic souls, these old people~exclusively concerned about
7 5 | privations, and~saving, as people do save in the provinces,
8 5 | those were the good times; people shot each other, but~what
9 5 | and for~the king. Educated people did the evil, educated noblemen
10 7 | whose affections belong to a people and so affect a world.~ ~"
11 8 | mean when you go there. People said to Rochefide: 'You
12 8 | obtained the superficial~people who are friends with every
13 8 | led me, as~it does so many people, to ingratitude. You have
14 8 | read the first~page. "Do people reason on their situation
15 9 | of forty."~ ~Here the old people turned to retrace their
16 10| which helped the Fathers to people theirs with sacred images.
17 11| Sand. I will send one of my people this very evening to Nantes~
18 12| throughout the whole town,~people accosted each other with
19 13| transparent; he colored, as guilty people, or happy~people color.
20 13| guilty people, or happy~people color. He announced that
21 13| among a primitive race of~people, where men are moved by
22 16| the minds of these good~people that youth might die of
23 16| louis/ to bring one down.~ ~"People die of something, but not
24 16| crowded with the country people coming in to the~funeral
25 17| marriage~ceremony? The great people shut themselves in a box
26 17| rolls along;~the little people gaily tramp the roads, sitting
27 17| and, as often happens when~people play a part to efface other
28 17| tremble when I speak. Dear people! they ought to be preserved~
29 17| respects to us. These worthy people, in their holiday costumes,~
30 18| another word; leave me now; people are looking at us; it~might
31 18| enough, before a thousand people!~There, you see I am strong;
32 22| husband, he was pitied; people thought Beatrix inexcusable
33 22| refused to receive dull rich people~and smirched people; and
34 22| rich people~and smirched people; and only departed from
35 24| lose all his~handkerchiefs. People think that Othello, or his
36 25| appearance in the world! How people will talk of it! Why! you'
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