Part, chapter

 1    1,    2|        they never give me such trouble as this! But I will have
 2    1,    2|        would disappear without trouble, and he, the robbed one,
 3    1,    3|     without family or fortune. Trouble, he said, had obliged him
 4    1,    4| anxious to overcome, even some trouble which his wife felt but
 5    1,    6|    anxieties which appeared to trouble his life. From the day his
 6    1,   12|        take place without much trouble. A staircase, in a miserable
 7    1,   14|     Manoel.~“Did you take much trouble to catch the curious animal?”
 8    2,    6|     was bound at the moment to trouble him.~The two met, and the
 9    2,    8|     depth, had often given him trouble. The narrowness of the channel
10    2,   13|   spared myself a good deal of trouble and a headache which extends
11    2,   17|   happiness which had its only trouble in the remembrances of Tijuco
12    2,   19|     remorse began gradually to trouble the scoundrel’s life. The
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