Part,  Chapter

 1     I,       V|     young and childlike that no living man would have supposed
 2     I,     VII|       into politics to make his living, or perhaps to squander
 3     I,    VIII| respected position and a decent living, and I expect to do better
 4     I,      IX|        hermits of bygone times, living on roots and other primitive
 5     I,      IX|  skilled and renowned physician living with me and looking after
 6     I,      IX|        of his ascetical mode of living; nymphomania of old age;
 7     I,      IX|         and other property, and living a secluded life as guardian
 8     I,      IX|       not change your course of living in the least degree. The
 9     I,      IX|      something that resembles a living death, a prospect too horrible
10     I,       X|   outright, instead of making a living corpse of him, as is so
11     I,       X|        their family, instead of living upon the bounty of friends
12    II,      IV|        mode of earning a decent living for himself, and none of
13    II,    XVII|     what this expensive rate of living might cost. If she only
14    II,    XVII|     child."~ ~"That child! That living stigma which was branded
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