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1 5 | hers?"~ ~Calyste sprang up suddenly, and looked at his mother.~ ~"
2 7 | Robert le Diable." She~now suddenly sang the words in a heart-rending
3 7 | heart-rending manner, and then as~suddenly interrupted herself. Calyste
4 9 | thoughts. The young Breton suddenly felt within him a power
5 10| shutting of doors. Then suddenly~midnight sounded on the
6 11| cried Camille, angrily, suddenly appearing and interrupting~
7 11| delight at the~prospect, was suddenly overclouded.~ ~"What are
8 13| all her life a slave, she suddenly felt an inexplicable~desire
9 13| they alone together? Memory suddenly flashed into her mind, in
10 13| certain aspects, which suddenly~enlightened her. What! instead
11 14| at any~rate a Parisian suddenly transported thither would
12 14| slowly, saying~nothing.~ ~Suddenly, at the turn of a path,
13 15| at last.' The spent ball suddenly comes to life~again, and
14 16| Calyste, wearied out, went off suddenly~to bed, the players dropped
15 16| probably ever shed in his~life. Suddenly he rose to his feet, walked
16 17| might have noticed clouds, suddenly and~curtly refused to accept
17 18| melodramas, by gathering flowers.~Suddenly a horrible thought rode
18 19| however, she asked him suddenly:~ ~"What did you do yesterday?"~ ~"
19 19| once more historical!" Then suddenly plunging~her eyes into those
20 19| Sabine burst into~tears.~ ~Suddenly as if bitten by a viper,
21 19| attempts to relate~the facts. Suddenly Ursula was illuminated by
22 20| the carriage," she said suddenly; "I shall go to the Opera."~ ~
23 23| this want~of intelligence, suddenly exclaimed to herself:~ ~"
24 25| said Madame Schontz, suddenly stopping short, "in whose~
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