Part,  Chapter

 1     I,     III|            mountain air had become heavy and warm in spite of the
 2     I,       V|           to a room with beautiful heavy brocaded draperies, evidently
 3     I,       V|          prayers there. I felt the heavy load on my heart, and once
 4     I,      VI|        chain of diamonds above the heavy purple velvet hangings which
 5     I,      VI|          the bed-curtains issued a heavy groaning, as if the little
 6     I,      IX|            large, high turret.~ ~A heavy oaken door, beautifully
 7     I,      IX|           see it!"~ ~He lifted the heavy lid of the chest, and I
 8     I,      IX|        near. A single meal of some heavy, unwonted food, one glass
 9    II,       I|            crowned with a tiara of heavy black tresses, more precious
10    II,      IV|           laid on his own life was heavy upon his innocent children,
11    II,      IV| twenty-five years he dragged these heavy chains on his weary limbs,
12    II,      XI|          from her scanty crops the heavy debts I had incurred. All
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