Chapter
1 I | tanned by the sun. She had an Italian cast of~countenance and
2 I | his companion, saying in~Italian:--~ ~"I will see if the
3 I | speak with~him," said the Italian to the captain on duty.~ ~
4 I | audience in~writing; the Italian insisted that the soldier
5 II | brightened the lips of the young Italian, who seemed thoughtful,
6 II | addressing Ginevra.~ ~The Italian pretended not to hear; perhaps
7 II | the conclusion~that the Italian's silence showed a grandeur
8 II | di Piombo. The beautiful Italian became the~centre of all
9 II | turned on his pallet.~ ~The Italian then looked fixedly at Madame
10 II | thing to hear the studious Italian sing, that all~the other
11 III| that proscribed being an Italian soul,~devotion to Napoleon,
12 III| enough, but to~the girl's Italian imagination it was a happy
13 III| was music itself to the Italian girl.~Brought up as a Corsican,
14 III| features of the beautiful Italian,--her~gestures, the peculiar
15 III| whom Schnetz puts into the~Italian scenes of his "genre" pictures.
16 IV | nocturne." Ginevra was an Italian, and that says all.~ ~At
17 V | women.~Superstitious as an Italian, she saw an omen in this
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