Chapter
1 I | like these solid old tools, tried and trusty.~You will not
2 I | saying to himself. While he tried to~follow his son's train
3 I | in life.~He himself had tried to sell them a better class
4 I | this notion in his head, he tried to find out whether David
5 I | philosophical curiosity, he tried to find out~how far the
6 I | a man. The Cointets had~tried to ruin the Sechards by
7 I | never made. Chardon~had tried to find a specific for the
8 I | great hearthfires; they tried their~powers in abortive
9 II | king's favorite who has tried to climb yet higher, and~
10 II | the last forty years, have tried to tame the~ancient families
11 III | weight on the poor poet, and tried to~frighten and crush him
12 III | conduct~approved than she tried to win a general sanction.
13 IV | looked in the glass and tried to~give himself a countenance.~ ~"
14 IV | at the ceiling and vainly tried to think of something~else
15 IV | de~Bargeton's husband, he tried to find out if the good
16 IV | mind; again and again he tried to talk about~silkworms;
17 V | moved by this love~that tried to explain away its greatness. "
18 V | Didot-Saint-Leger had since tried to~perfect it. The vellum
19 VI | in short, that evening he~tried to act up to the part of
20 VIII| pistols. M. de Negrepelisse tried them over and over again.~
21 VIII| over again.~M. du Chatelet tried to prevent them from practising
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