Part,  Chapter

 1     I,    VIII|      present course lasts awhile longer, there will not be much
 2     I,      IX|      sooner. This fear I know no longer. I know well that my time
 3     I,      IX|    should not live for ten years longer, or even more, provided
 4     I,    XIII|         the Cincinnatus a little longer. When Siegfried said, "We
 5    II,       I|         to suppress my mirth any longer, I broke into a ringing
 6    II,       I|    always forget that you are no longer a little girl of twelve
 7    II,      VI| determined that I would be so no longer. Surely I, who was formerly
 8    II,      VI|       cannot go on that way much longer. His only resource is his
 9    II,     VII|          a man - at any rate, no longer. My judgment had left me,
10    II,       X|     evening. I can't keep it any longer. You did not accept of it
11    II,       X|        take it from me. It is no longer my own - it is yours."~ ~"
12    II,       X|        my duty!" This I could no longer do. She had escaped, and
13    II,    XIII|       enemy, hardly thinking any longer of resistance. If a Prussian
14    II,    XVII|         use you can be to me any longer. I am tired of going death-hunting,
15    II,    XVII|          no need of my suffering longer for a fault for which I
16    II,    XVII|         sisters and sleep awhile longer," and, nodding sweetly to
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