Chap.

 1        2|       sank last night’s long, feverish dream of endlessly rolling
 2        3|  served to conceal the small, feverish rumor of these recruiting
 3        5| second he had held in his own feverish clasp a little fresh and
 4        6|    his pretext being a slight feverish attack. M. Venot had rushed
 5       10|      in an access of burning, feverish folly. His horses and Lucy
 6       11|    vast horizon. At this last feverish moment the course was empty
 7       12|    under the influence of her feverish heat and of remembered delights.
 8       12|     waves of sound and sent a feverish thrill along its walls.
 9       13|      she dressed herself with feverish haste in order to run round
10       13|       forties, that restless, feverish time in the life of women,
11       13|     given her a severe fit of feverish nervousness, which verged
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