Paragraph
1 I | are very annoying;~and I hope, for Moreau's sake, that
2 II | the~years go by and still hope on? By what means did this
3 III | apart a few~steps.~ ~"I hope you're well, Madame Clapart,"
4 IV | Ah! you don't know--and I hope you~never may know--what
5 V | any contagious diseases, I hope."~ ~Oscar in reply would
6 VI | said Estelle, stiffly. "I~hope you will now go and dress,"
7 VI | the decoration business. I hope you recognize your own work,
8 VI | the count, hastily; "and I hope you~will give me the pleasure
9 VII | in it. That thought, that hope, gave me~courage to face
10 VII | francs a year. Now that~my hope is vanishing, your future
11 VII | Cardot; that is our last~hope. Cardot owed a great deal
12 VII | your uncle Cardot, and I hope that you will~endeavor to
13 VII | repeat it,~that is our last hope."~ ~Monsieur Jean-Jerome-Severin
14 VII | she held~to him as to a hope, and always went to see
15 VII | of Husson, which, let us hope, he will bear~worthily,
16 VIII| rishissime, we will make him, I hope, pay a glorious~entrance-fee."~ ~"
17 IX | with the~fortune most men hope to acquire in order to leave
18 XI | monsieur," said Oscar.~ ~"I hope you will give me the pleasure,
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