Chap.

 1        5|        count she smiled.~“Oh, you frightened me,” she said simply.~And
 2        5|      thought of his roughness had frightened him; he was ashamed of what
 3        6|         to her feet again she was frightened. She thought she had seen
 4        6|         in such a state. She grew frightened and put her hand over his
 5        6| presentiment of coming ill, which frightened her in the evenings as thoroughly
 6        7|           extra ladies were quite frightened when they recognized her,
 7        7|           sat looking at her. She frightened him. The newspaper had dropped
 8        8|       explained that magnificence frightened her and that NOW, from time
 9        8|           fit of sobbing. She was frightened and she made off. This time
10        8|          no longer be so “beastly frightened” as of yore. So she pretended
11       10|          to get free, for she was frightened, and in smothered tones
12       10|          he lay beside her he had frightened her with a dreadful story.
13       11|           little flames, which so frightened her the night he spoke of
14       12|    declared when she ceased to be frightened. She suspected something,
15       12|       seeing her so pale, he grew frightened and made her inhale a little
16       14|           imaginations. They felt frightened. It was silly to stand talking
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