Chapter
1 I | he started afresh with new hopes. Medicine had been
2 I | craze, would question their new friend about the departed
3 I | keenly enjoying the rare and new pleasure.~From the moment
4 II | will give you something new to try. For these two months
5 II | good—capital; and quite new in flavour. It is a find,
6 II | counsel as to baptizing the new liqueur. He wanted to call
7 III | of all his trials of some new career the hopes of rapidly
8 IV | thoughtful, feeling in his soul a new anxiety as yet undefined,
9 IV | undefined, the secret germ of a new pain.~He went out early,
10 IV | inspired by the feeling of a new home, and the subtle and
11 V | familiar—abruptly struck him as new, different from what they
12 V | We will take it to your new rooms.” And when they went
13 VI | clew to her strange and new disorder. He would discern
14 VI | lived almost entirely in his new apartments, and only came
15 VII | lawyer was to sleep in his new abode for the first time;
16 VIII| robbing my brother.”~This new view of the matter having
17 VIII| shore in two splendid cities—New York and Havre; and the
18 VIII| have done; and under this new embrace the poor woman’s
19 VIII| going to see whether your new servant keeps the kitchen
20 IX | as to the details of his new life and any details he
21 IX | the street once more, a new form of melancholy came
22 IX | sail on the 7th, bound for New York, and Pierre Roland
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