Part, chapter

 1    1,   20|       the crime for which he was condemned.”~“Really!”~“And I add,”
 2    1,   20|     already taken place. You are condemned to death, and you know,
 3    2,    2|        not my true one! You have condemned an innocent man! Confess
 4    2,    2|       than curiosity against the condemned man, who was the principal
 5    2,    3| circumstances, and heard himself condemned to death.~There was no hope
 6    2,    3|         the diamond arrayal. The condemned man was lost. But during
 7    2,    3|   instead of the name of a felon condemned to death for murder, innocent
 8    2,    3|        that he had been unjustly condemned; his joy had been extreme
 9    2,    4|         say he had been unjustly condemned. The magistrate’s duty,
10    2,    5|        you are Joam Dacosta, the condemned man of the diamond arrayal?”~“
11    2,    6|       thief, of a murderer, of a condemned felon, for whom the gallows
12    2,   15|          evidence could save the condemned man.~And so Benito considered
13    2,   16|          some means by which the condemned man could escape the penalty
14    2,   17|          last hours spent in the condemned cell at Villa Rica, his
15    2,   17|         rehabilitate you whom it condemned twenty years since, you
16    2,   17|       against the decision which condemned me! The first time, a few
17    2,   18|         the morning of which the condemned man was to perish on the
18    2,   19|       not Joam Dacosta, unjustly condemned to death; it was I, the
19    2,   19|       knew that another had been condemned in his place! He knew subsequently
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