Part,  Chapter

 1    II,      II|           some powerful egotistic motive, as jealousy, revenge, greed,
 2    II,      II|       committed without a visible motive are founded upon lunacy,
 3    II,      II|        above him, a spirit, for a motive."~ ~As I pronounced this
 4    II,      II|        evasively, "that gives the motive to the Bánk-Bán tragedy."~ ~
 5    II,       V|       mischief without a material motive, simply for the sake of
 6    II,      VI|         hurt me, and what was the motive of the other in warning
 7    II,      VI|             So, about Siegfried's motive I felt pretty sure; but
 8    II,      VI|          but what was that girl's motive in betraying the whole plot?
 9    II,      VI|           kin; and, finally, what motive had she in informing me
10    II,      VI|         not Cenni's? What was her motive in confiding to me such
11    II,    VIII| altogether. That was a part of my motive in coming."~ ~"You magnanimously
12    II,      IX|           she, guided by whatever motive, should release herself
13    II,    XVII|       husband, without any secret motive or hidden reason to prompt
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