Chapter

 1     I|    at the same time that he meant to give nothing.~ ~The stranger
 2    II|     days every man in Paris meant to be a millionaire. In
 3   III|    Martin's song as if they meant to shout the heavens down.
 4     V|  and his favourite, whom he meant to make his heir, so people
 5    VI|    benefits she had one day meant to repay with a love stronger
 6    VI| accept a challenge which is meant for some one else?"~ ~"Because
 7    VI|    Then this letter will be meant for you," said the heyduke,
 8    VI| they wish to insult him? He meant in the plainest, most unmistakable
 9    VI|     the point of firing. He meant to torture his adversary
10  VIII|    very well that it is not meant for me, but for my nephew,
11  VIII|    all the speeches that he meant to make here, there, and
12    IX|    nice little sum, and she meant to deposit thirty thousand
13    IX|     few words to a Jew - he meant a Greek. Would she go on
14    IX|   that the gentleman really meant to make her his wife, and
15    IX|   not told the girl that he meant to make her his wife.~ ~
16     X|   aware where she ought and meant to sit, without his telling
17     X|    not appropriated;" which meant, being interpreted, "Your
18  XIII|      Even the elderly women meant to accompany the huntsmen
19  XVII|   to part with. Such a word meant submission, unconditional
20    XX| heart to the old people. He meant, he said, to make a pilgrimage
21   XXI|  down to ordinary food, and meant to eat nothing till the
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