Chap.

 1        4|           Oh, you may imagine how miserable I am,” cried Nana; “he won’
 2        4|           very tipsy. It made her miserable to think of it, but champagne
 3        5|       stairways which you find in miserable tenements. Count Muffat
 4        6|      never heeded it and was only miserable at the thought that the
 5        7|          thought that he was very miserable.~Then he thought of God.
 6        7|    avoiding and thereby rendering miserable, would be delighted were
 7        8|     pretext to render her life so miserable that she had found it best
 8        8|         was taken by them to some miserable furnished room and came
 9        9|       about it day and night— I’m miserable about it. I must have the
10       10|           filling with tears. The miserable days were over now; his
11       11|          I said to her: ‘you’re a miserable wretch; you’re bringing
12       11|           wagered louis. It was a miserable business, and it proved
13       12| Labordette, pretending to be very miserable about it, threw all the
14       13|          and he only remained her miserable possessor in obedience to
15       13|           been the result of this miserable state of things which kept
16       13|       Never before had he felt so miserable, so useless, so very childish.
17       13|         in my place; they make me miserable; they treat me like a hussy.”~
18       13|      declared, “Madame is utterly miserable!”~Muffat was still stupefied;
19       13|          that Madame had passed a miserable day. He had only been at
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