Chapter
1 I | would seem.” For some days past he had spoken of her as “
2 III | hard it was for a man of past thirty to be reduced to
3 IV | up the agitations of the past day, trying to bring out
4 IV | breakwater as they glided past.~When they reached the open
5 IV | water hissing and rushing past. The prow ripped up the
6 IV | It could be seen swirling past the gas-lights, which it
7 IV | been for these three days past fighting with all the subtlety
8 IV | enable him to look at the past and at unknown events with
9 IV | the more he recalled the past few years, the more extraordinary,
10 V | nothing else for some time past.”~
11 VI | turned off to the left, past a windmill at work—a melancholy,
12 VII | choked down for so long past, all his unspoken despair
13 VII | crushed with woe this month past, spending my nights without
14 VII | have known it this month past. Your feelings are touched
15 VII | have heard for this month past from your brother, if I
16 VII | Let me speak. For a month past I have suffered all that
17 VII | struck three as they went past.~Outside their own door
18 VIII| he had done for some time past, instead of kissing her
19 IX | happiness. As they went past the doctor said to himself: “
20 IX | And as he thought of their past labour—wasted labour, and
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