Chapter
1 Int | have furnished us in their letters enough valuable revelations
2 II | her old private and family letters.~Occasionally, Jeanne replaced
3 III | Jeanne,” was painted in gold letters on the stern.~Père Lastique,
4 VI | always busy, either writing letters to their aristocratic relations,
5 IX | and emptying her cherished letters on her lap, she would place
6 IX | my advice and burn your letters, all of them—your mother’
7 IX | But Jeanne also kept her letters, was preparing a chest of “
8 IX | they were a litany, the old letters that her mother loved. It
9 IX | little packages of yellow letters, tied and arranged in order,
10 IX | read them. They were old letters that savored of a former
11 IX | pleased.~Jeanne tossed the letters as she read them to the
12 IX | threw aside these infamous letters as she would have thrown
13 IX | her father. And all the letters were lying on the floor!
14 IX | other room and seizing the letters in handfuls, she threw them
15 IX | set fire to this pile of letters. When they were reduced
16 XI | principal had received four letters signed by Jeanne saying
17 XI | Poplars” were found two letters from this person, who seemed
18 XI | francs. He then wrote four letters in six months, giving his
19 XI | concise terms and ending the letters with coldly affectionate
20 XI | her. Jeanne, in these cold letters, felt this woman in ambush,
21 XI | The young man wrote three letters full of the most heartfelt
22 XIII| never got more than ten letters a year. I took one up to
23 XIV | confused and mixed up the letters and formed other words,
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