Book,  chapter

 1    1,    3| high-souled, religious young woman.~Lord Glenarvan did not
 2    1,    5| Helena was a brave, generous woman, and what she had just done
 3    1,    6|  fancy any other, even for a woman. Isnt it true, John?”~“
 4    2,    6|    their mother, a fine tall woman. There was no mistaking
 5    2,   11|   converse with this amiable woman they forgot the fatigue
 6    2,   17|    her agony, the courageous woman helped her husband into
 7    3,    5|    visiting an old Brazilian woman who was very ill. She had
 8    3,    5|    religion, which the dying woman accepted, without objection.
 9    3,   10|     feeling. This courageous woman made heroic efforts to restrain
10    3,   10|        cried the unfortunate woman in terror.~Glenarvan, without
11    3,   11|     of such sacrifices.~This woman came on the scene; she was
12    3,   12|     it.~It was the hand of a woman or child, a European! On~
13    3,   17|     When a man had failed, a woman perhaps, with her gentler
14    3,   19|     you leave her. You are a woman; you can and should accept
15    3,   21|   than one. The most perfect woman in the world has always
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