Chap.

 1        1|     illumination that one could read the notices thereon at a
 2        2|       put on her spectacles and read the article aloud, standing
 3        4|        cried with rage when she read Leon’s article on Nana;
 4        5|     phrase—how often had others read it in that very place!—”
 5        5|          and he had gone out to read it under the gas light in
 6        6|       the top of a cupboard and read during the winter before
 7        7|       by,” she asked, “have you read Fauchery’s article about
 8        7|       on her lips.~“You havent read the Figaro article, have
 9        7|   seemed as though he wanted to read the article again. A cold,
10        7|       was struck by what he had read, for it had rudely awakened
11        8| sprinkling of vows. She used to read them to everybody. Fontan
12        8|    flinging it aside as soon as read. Fontan had begun beating
13        8|       after the letter had been read over aloud, would kiss him
14        8|        silence, when at last he read out the letter in the level
15        9|    Father Cossard had got up to read it, and he was now figuring
16        9|      eyes on him. The young man read menaces in that darkling
17       10|     friend; on others she would read the Figaro, in which the
18       10|        very first sentences she read that she was accused of
19       10|          During the day she had read a novel which was at that
20       10|     That very afternoon she had read in the Figaro an account
21       13|     rosy disappearance he would read the number of men that passed.
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