Chapter
1 I | fancy, and he had set to work with so much ardour that
2 I | the habit of calling to work or chat for an hour in the
3 I | eager and warmed to his work, while Pierre, out of breath
4 I | amount of the fortune, so to work round to these interesting
5 I | any longer in Paris and work for the children till I
6 III | prove it. But then he must work a hundred times harder than
7 III | you are born poor you must work; well, so much the worse;
8 III | much the worse; and you do work. But where you have dividends!
9 III | how he could now set to work to confide his fears to
10 IV | shall make my way by hard work and learning.”~But his mother
11 IV | houses of Paris, had set to work, with all her superior and
12 V | beginning a piece of worsted work, intended for Jean’s lodgings.
13 VI | satisfied with his day’s work.~Suddenly she rose, rushed
14 VI | there the reapers were at work, and in the plots where
15 VI | left, past a windmill at work—a melancholy, gray wreck,
16 VIII| would sell his furniture and work like any other man, like
17 VIII| this summer.”~“Yes. The work has been pushed forward
18 IX | mortar, started and left his work.~“You are never to be seen
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