Part,  Chapter

 1     I,      IV| finished without a more or less perfect knowledge of Latin. But
 2     I,      VI|        and made the resemblance perfect.~ ~At nine o'clock the government
 3     I,      IX|     Every one of the rooms is a perfect museum, and contains precious
 4     I,      IX|       years ago. For you are in perfect health otherwise, and there
 5     I,      IX|     Sultan of Morocco, the most perfect specimen of its kind? I
 6     I,      XI|        unrivalled fencer, and a perfect marksman. What a soldier
 7     I,      XI|        they were delivered in a perfect Volapük - that is, in a
 8     I,      XI|  acknowledge that his taste was perfect; but - very expensive, as
 9     I,      XI|         Siegfried? Why, he is a perfect guardian angel, the personification
10    II,      IX|         a new, better, and more perfect form. I felt as if you had
11    II,      IX|      Countess Cenni! Oh, what a perfect match! Ha! ha! ha!"~ ~I
12    II,       X|       indifferent fencer. He is perfect in both; it is his profession.
13    II,     XVI|    requires pluck, courage, and perfect coolness. You already knew
14    II,     XVI|        mutual understanding was perfect. Of course, it was natural
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