Chapter
1 I | protected through those times by the English fleet,~its
2 III | Court used to be in other times; it is what the Hotel~Saint-Paul
3 IV | sovereigns nowadays. The times are changed, and so are
4 IV | French noblesse of other times were~rich and powerful,
5 IV | to suit the taste of the times.~ ~But, pent up together
6 IV | and no one, yet there were times when she~quitted her sceptical
7 VI | He would have died twenty times~over sooner than ask a favour
8 VI | past life.~ ~A score of times he asked himself, like a
9 VI | told her already a score of times; or rather, the Duchess~
10 VI | the Duchess~had a score of times read his secret in his eyes;
11 VII | Duchess grew angry at such times.~ ~"My friend," she said
12 VII | physical attraction which at times showed her no mercy,~though
13 VII | fight it down.~ ~At such times she was something sublime
14 VIII| any one of them a thousand times~better worth your while
15 VIII| to each~other met three times in society during the course
16 IX | through this~experience many times without dishonour, for it
17 IX | nothing."~ ~She remembered the times that she had played the
18 IX | declaration worthy of ancient times. It is~heroic of Mme de
19 IX | law against you. How many times have we seen heirs-at-law~
20 X | the men and women of those times, my heart, were quite as~
21 X | coarse, dull,~licentious times. Faugh! it is revolting.
22 X | sharp-witted. It would be a hundred times better to go to~Montriveau'
23 X | two~centuries behind the times with your false ideas of
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