Chap.

 1        2|        everywhere, she had been driven to stow them away in threes
 2        6|  Fauchery and Daguenet had been driven up together in one carriage,
 3        6| dignified step, was now nightly driven to plunge his teeth into
 4        6|    raging at this new obstacle, driven to extremities, bent on
 5        7|      good courtesan who, though driven to desperation, was yet
 6       10|        carriage and had herself driven to Laure’s. It had occurred
 7       11|      ladies whom the shower had driven from the rows of chairs
 8       12|      women might, perhaps, have driven him to it for the sake of
 9       13|       only a few louis. She was driven to borrow from Zoe, or she
10       13|       silence; the carriage had driven away, and she sat motionless,
11       13|       Muffat, wretched at home, driven out by ennui and shame,
12       13|       on again now that she had driven him so wild, brought on
13       14|       and fro like flocks being driven to the slaughterhouse at
14       14| Tuileries. France ought to have driven them out yesterday. Don’
15       14|   Bismarck! Why, they’ve simply driven me crazy with the chap!
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