Part,  Chapter

 1     I,       V|      opinion of Mrs. Dumany's state of mind. No doubt she was
 2     I,      VI|   agreed on. The Secretary of State had received bonds for 1,000,000
 3     I,    VIII|        and mingled largely in state and political affairs. Of
 4     I,      IX|      would hardly express his state of mind. I have already
 5    II,      IV|       become a constitutional state with a free Parliament,
 6    II,       V|      knife.~ ~I was in such a state of anguish that I did not
 7    II,    VIII| believe in her, and that is a state of things not to be endured.
 8    II,      IX|        which was still in the state in which I had coiled and
 9    II,    XIII|      something of the present state of the Money Market, I looked
10    II,    XVII|      the subject, because the state of your health was such
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