Chap.

 1        7|     simply wrung his heart with anguish. Every time that golden–
 2        7|      prey to the sort of secret anguish that besets people when
 3        8|       filled her with shame and anguish, for had she not bade it
 4        9|    blamed himself for this. His anguish was becoming unbearable;
 5        9|     this sudden transition from anguish to comedy. She walked about
 6        9|        and a look of the utmost anguish. “I’ll do whatever you like,
 7       10|        and he hesitated in such anguish of mind that his knees gave
 8       10|        heart there was a silent anguish, a profound sense of pain,
 9       10|     that shame mingled with his anguish. He who laughed at Satin,
10       10|         and now, in trouble and anguish of heart at being thus dismissed,
11       11|   patriotic grief.~A feeling of anguish was beginning to choke all
12       12|      one dead. A shadow of deep anguish had passed over Muffat’s
13       13| wretched girl did not know what anguish this curio had cost him.
14       13|       bore witness to someone’s anguish, and a chair which lay amid
15       13|      listened to her stark with anguish, yet in utter submission.
16       13|     heaven, by way of expiatory anguish, the abominable torment
17       13|        him for the whole day of anguish. What annoyed the young
18       13|      infliction!~In his jealous anguish the unhappy man was comparatively
19       13|        again he was seized with anguish, and gazing with a look
20       13|       her utterance, and in her anguish she flung herself athwart
21       14|         great spreading wind of anguish and stupor set every head
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