Chapter
1 I | have become the leader of a great nation; I~command the Republic;
2 II | earnestly, to~her neighbor. A great silence fell on the group
3 II | party spite."~ ~ ~"I have a great mind to go and get Mademoiselle
4 II | Her absorption seemed so great that she sat down before
5 II | necessity, that mother of great~things, lent her, for the
6 II | drawing from the shelter of a great portfolio.~Mademoiselle
7 III| described, in words of fire, the great~disaster of Waterloo. His
8 III| hair."~ ~"You would do me a great kindness," said Laure, in
9 III| Corsican had~maintained a great establishment, more for
10 III| in the change.~Like all great souls, she found her luxury
11 III| yet, for all that, a very great evil had~resulted from her
12 IV | to protect you from some great evil."~ ~"The only evil
13 IV | orders. This was the first~great step toward better things.
14 IV | her hands together with great~force, and said, in a voice
15 IV | symptoms which reveal a great crisis in life. All~three
16 IV | father and mother in the~great and gloomy salon, Piombo
17 V | stuffs, linen, clothes, and~a great quantity of other articles
18 V | and when they reached the great hall where the civil~marriages
19 V | a simple act in itself, great only in thought.~ ~After
20 VI | presently. "Dear friend, I take great~pleasure in sitting up.
21 VI | There is I know not what great power in the~thought: all
22 VI | besides, a happiness so great as mine has to be paid for.~
23 VI | fire scarcely warmed the great spaces of~their salon. The
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