Chapter
1 I | stillness of falling night, listen to the organ music, the~
2 I | the Te Deum; he could not~listen any longer. The nun's music
3 IV | too often he prefers to~listen to his intellect. The national
4 V | conversation; she would listen to anything, corrupting~
5 VI | with ambitious~souls; to listen to a babbler with every
6 VII | which you~threaten him?--Listen," she continued after a
7 VII | word. I will not, I cannot~listen to you."~ ~Mme de Langeais
8 VIII| utterance~for ingenuous love. To listen to her words was to pass
9 VIII| your~fears with a word. Listen! if I deserted you, I should
10 VIII| Besides, I will~untie you. But listen attentively to what I have
11 VIII| so exceedingly kind as to~listen to me. You need fear nothing.
12 VIII| have power. I am not God. Listen~carefully to me," he continued,
13 VIII| you to answer me yet. So listen to me still. ~In any case
14 IX | eyes, straining her ears to listen through~space, wishing that
15 IX | bring these~children to listen to reason"~ ~"But, dear
16 X | to make rash young heads listen to reason. Renounce your~
17 X | and once~she seemed to listen during a pause. ~ ~"What
18 X | less guilty than you think. Listen to my justification, I owe
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