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1 1 | ancient superstitions. If, by chance, a gendarme passes you,
2 3 | obstinately. By~singular chance she had often made lucky
3 4 | up~one farthing for the chance of winning five, game after
4 6 | ward was therefore left to chance. Little cared-~for by her
5 6 | was an old archaeologist. Chance had flung her into the regions
6 9 | and create our own fate;~chance has not as much to do with
7 10| the beautiful fruit which chance has offered to you at the~
8 14| Into this basin, or~cleft, chance, possibly man, has conveyed
9 14| nothing, by one of those chance accidents that seem nonsense
10 14| breakfast for her.~ ~"Another chance lost!" Camille said to him
11 14| her position, looked to chance to arrange the future.~ ~
12 18| caught,~and who trust to chance to cut the Gordian knot
13 18| bestowed upon Sabine. When by chance a man is adored by his wife,
14 18| when a benign and radiant~chance had given him for his wife
15 18| gesture to sit beside her. By chance (a selected chance, possibly,
16 18| her. By chance (a selected chance, possibly, for~women have
17 19| little scene gave Calyste the chance to maintain a countenance.
18 19| Fortunately the 'B' was by chance effaced. But~the perfume
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