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1 I | happiness~Railroads, in a future not far distant, must force
2 III | him, poor child!~But his future absolutely requires that
3 III | satisfying either then or in the future the wants she had acquired~
4 III | the whole life and all the future of his mother. The poor~
5 III | really going to trust your future to this~fragile bark?"~ ~"
6 V | of the courts. I ask your~future protection, Excellency,"
7 V | painter already famous, a~future general, and a young diplomatist
8 VI | the cruel Mistigris, "a future diplomatist knows the~saying
9 VI | How do you mean, a future diplomatist?" exclaimed
10 VII | ought to consider their future. At present I do not know~
11 VII | the certainty~of a fine future for the fortunate child.~ ~"
12 VII | hope is vanishing, your future terrifies me. I cannot take
13 VII | will be more discreet in future,--~that you will not talk
14 VII | for being scolded.~ ~"In future," she said, "you will listen
15 VII | would~take charge of your future? You will be a lawyer in
16 VII | without his living, in future. If the boy ever means to
17 VII | and to conduct~yourself in future properly."~ ~ ~
18 VIII| continued to do as well in~the future.~ ~In spite of these virtuous
19 VIII| wealthy wood-merchant. This future~magistrate, actuated by
20 IX | where he found that the future star of the ballet~was the
21 X | then I will decide upon my future."~ ~Moreau, deeply distressed
22 XI | his death, to secure my future, about which I did not think,~
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