Part,  Chapter

1     I,      IV|  heard them pronounced by a foreigner before. How could he know
2    II,      VI|  and considered almost as a foreigner and a scholar, not a patriotic
3    II,    XIII| your duty; and as you are a foreigner, it is natural to ask, Why
4    II,    XIII|     you tell me, why you, a foreigner, took the risk of such imminent
5    II,      XV|  the police officer. That a foreigner had so much confidence in
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