Chapter
1 I | compartments of his case, reading his copy, verifying the~
2 I | his son and the foreman~reading books, which the "bear"
3 I | by a poet!" said Lucien, reading the signature of~the preface.~ ~"
4 II | with a taste for music and reading.~During the Revolution one
5 III| office, and~spent the day in reading proofs, superintending the
6 III| self-sacrifice, after the reading of~verse that opened out
7 IV | his study on puerilities, reading the~newspaper through from
8 IV | glorious close after Lucien's reading~that night.~ ~A few habitues
9 IV | grew~impatient to begin the reading, for then he could assume
10 V | diabolical torture of that reading. If poetry is to be rendered~
11 V | delivery, applauded the reading without understanding the
12 V | on earth, and the Angel, reading His thought,~Came down to
13 V | rose, looked bored by the~reading, murmuring, "Very nice!" "
14 V | stuff that~he has just been reading to us is a drug in the market,
15 VI | present on the occasion of the reading; "he is a good-looking fellow,~
16 VI | your face whilst you were reading," cried~Louise, using the
17 VI | better than listening to reading aloud after dinner."~ ~Cajoled
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