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1 2 | of that unhappy~kingdom. Fanny O'Brien was then twenty-one
2 2 | spirals swaying to the breeze. Fanny O'Brien was one of those
3 2 | the still, brown room, as Fanny's voice~cast into the heart
4 2 | agreeably surprised to find in~Fanny O'Brien a young woman born
5 5 | sublimity of the picture. Fanny's skin was so transparent~ ~
6 5 | less than what he was when Fanny~placed him in the abbe's
7 5 | This bitter thought wrung Fanny's heart and destroyed her
8 5 | mother a gown of velvet; but Fanny~O'Brien had aunts and rich
9 5 | heiress, knowing that he, like Fanny their exiled favorite, was~
10 5 | and is as much beloved as Fanny.~But perhaps all other mothers
11 5 | paternal anxiety, saddened Fanny for a~moment. The rector'
12 5 | said the old man. "Really,~Fanny, if I did not know you,
13 5 | child," said the religious Fanny, "nothing can excuse a woman
14 5 | house."~ ~"Who is making Fanny weep?" cried the old man,
15 5 | up the paper.~ ~"My dear Fanny," said the old baron, with
16 5 | baroness.~ ~"But, my dear Fanny, if the woman were a saint
17 8 | mademoiselle," replied the woman.~ ~Fanny, uneasy at the sadness she
18 8 | moving domestic~harmony.~ ~Fanny would fain have questioned
19 8 | The baron had gone out; Fanny went to the~door of the
20 8 | her many things," replied Fanny.~ ~"Felicite thinks only
21 9 | are the Casterans?" said Fanny to the baron.~ ~"An old
22 10| What has happened?" cried Fanny, seeing his emotion, which
23 10| went on the portico with Fanny to see Calyste mount; "remember
24 10| on the following day.~ ~Fanny, who alone saw her son's
25 11| unaware of her own ignorance, Fanny rose through maternal~tenderness
26 14| baroness.~ ~"That one," thought Fanny, "really loves my boy; she
27 16| make my death as happy as Fanny has made my life,~swear
28 22| celebrated in the world of Fanny Beaupre, Susanne du~Val-Noble,
29 22| in legitimate marriage, Fanny Beaupre, Mariette, Antonia~
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