Chapter
1 I | an honest man, who~uses hard metal; and, to my way of
2 I | Angouleme, it would have~been hard to say which was the stronger
3 I | poverty. The life of hope and hard work and despair, in all
4 I | science, till they forgot the hard life of~the present, for
5 II | Angouleme it would have been hard to say which of the two
6 III | learned by heart in a month of hard~practice. Incapable though
7 III | staled in truth by pretty hard and constant wear, but new
8 IV | travels, and this gave a hard look to his~face. The skin
9 V | of all; he must conceal hard thinking and emotion, two~
10 V | immortality. If only I had a hard struggle before me! God
11 V | unthinkingly condemn him to a hard struggle? How can he maintain~
12 V | she~has spoiled him for hard work, and given him a taste
13 V | some years we may have~a hard time of it; but I shall
14 VI | drop so suddenly~down to hard fact.~ ~Eve and David both
15 VI | Marquises. Quality means hard cash for me,~that is what
16 VI | question thus raised was hard to lay, for the old man
17 VI | his~mother's and sister's hard earnings; for he saw the
18 VIII| friends have been working very hard, too," said Mme.~Chardon. "
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