Chap.

1        4|   children and had but one object in life, which was to increase
2        6|    leaving the train every object of sensation—the wide countryside,
3        9|  on a neighboring shelf an object which he did not seem to
4       10|   its sovereign, while the object of their adoration lolled
5       13| not see any very expensive object without wanting to possess
6       13| broke everything, and this object withered, and that grew
7       13|    rapping each successive object and proving clearly that
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