Book,  chapter

 1    1,    4|        sound asleep, dreaming of happy days.~After they had retired.
 2    1,    5|      benefactors, while grateful happy tears streamed down her
 3    1,    7| exclaimed Paganel, “I am but too happy to have made a mistake which
 4    1,    9|          he had to see Miss Mary happy. He was smitten with quite
 5    1,   21|          of his children. He was happy, and as Goethe says, “Nothing
 6    1,   21|            Nothing that makes us happy is an illusion.”~All this
 7    1,   24|      certain Robert is perfectly happy,” interrupted Paganel, eager
 8    1,   24|         is to put the shirt of a happy man on your shoulders.’
 9    1,   24|          man among them that was happy. Then he put on the shirts
10    1,   24|     thought, ‘Surely this man is happy, if there is such a thing
11    1,   24|          him, and said, ‘Are you happy?’ ‘Yes,’ was the reply. ‘
12    1,   26|         this noble guide, when a happy thought struck him. He had
13    2,    1|         our friend Paganel, in a happy moment of inspiration, discovered
14    2,    3|         t believe a man could be happy on a desert island?”~“I
15    2,    3|        much politeness. It was a happy day for him when these kindly
16    2,    4|          which I shall always be happy to do, by the by.”~“And
17    2,    7|     where he said he had found a happy home in exchange for his
18    2,   14|     exiles, who will be only too happy to do the honors of the
19    3,    4|          man of energy, till now happy and powerful, and deprived
20    3,   13|          powder and ball for the happy hunting grounds.~“Quite
21    3,   19|     brother,” replied Mary, “how happy my father would be if he
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