Chap.

1        4|   which was stupid enough to drive one to despair, began to
2        6|    that there was no need to drive. So in a somewhat straggling
3        7|      the country she used to drive him wild with delight, as
4        7|     your honest women. Dont drive me to it; dont oblige me
5        7|    the room, but she did not drive them out. Nay, she spoke
6       10|    Never going out except to drive, she was losing her walking
7       10|  from her daylong drowse and drive out or receive a whole mob
8       10| hospital. Or again she would drive up in her landau on her
9       14|      had bidden her coachman drive fast, and while the horses
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