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1 1 | you go to Guerande after reading this history you cannot
2 1 | ground-floor, and after reading an account of~the manners,
3 2 | usual while his wife was~reading to him the "Quotidienne."
4 2 | brother, sat listening to the~reading of the newspaper and knitting
5 2 | husband was asleep she stopped~reading. A ray of sunshine, stretching
6 3 | the moment when you are reading this portrait of her, the
7 3 | have done had she~found him reading novels or an impious newspaper.
8 4 | where his wife had stopped~reading. "Well, the first gentleman
9 5 | The baroness was again~reading the "Quotidienne" to her
10 5 | present moment. But after reading the~biography of Camille
11 6 | result of a~passion for reading, sustained by a powerful
12 6 | our day. Her prodigious reading~controlled her passions
13 11| the hours of~the night in reading; every evening he brought
14 11| spend four hours a day in reading their~romances."~ ~"So then
15 12| fall the letter, without reading all of it. She knelt~upon
16 12| have committed the sin of reading that~letter. My Calyste
17 13| du Guenic had~received in reading that letter.~ ~"Do you love
18 16| remembering her prayer~after reading the fatal letter written
19 17| of that contract before reading it, Calyste, on whose~forehead
20 17| the bride? How many women~reading this history will admit
21 18| knick-knacks, a book~in course of reading, in which glittered the
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