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1 I | first gave me a feeling of great melancholy, and at~last
2 II | was, at~five-and-twenty, a great politician, a man with a
3 III | destiny as he pleases.~ ~These great resolutions were formed
4 III | devious tide of Paris--that great harlot who takes you up
5 III | syllable of the name with great importance, depicted a fall
6 IV | without any kind of butter.~ ~Great was our distress.~ ~"No
7 VI | of his life that he was a great orator, a~concise orator,
8 VI | one of the fifty supposed~great statesmen who are the battledores
9 VII | the other side,~without a great deal of manoeuvring. Marcas
10 VII | free lance rather than as a great leader,~crushed by the necessity
11 VII | believed--all these things, great and~small, had not crushed,
12 VIII| observations, revealing him as a great~politician, a few questions
13 VIII| midst. The Government is the great criminal; it does not appreciate~
14 IX | best places, and~that the great thing was to be first in
15 IX | to devote themselves to a great cause.~ ~Our surprise was
16 IX | least expensive~--takes a great deal of money. The woman
17 IX | point of view, he really~was great. He did not indulge such
18 XI | funeral. Juste and I~had great difficulty in saving him
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