Chapter

 1     I|          Master Jock continued to regard the juvenile roué with a
 2   III|         man without the slightest regard to his official position;
 3    VI|    pastime. On the other hand, we regard it as our duty as gentlemen
 4   VII|        that henceforth they would regard him as their earthly Providence,
 5  VIII|      reasons, but it is no tender regard for thy friends or thy relations
 6    IX|         it if his intentions with regard to you were so serious.
 7    IX|          wife to your kinsmanlike regard!"~ ~Ah, this was the moment
 8     X|           And he had now begun to regard Fanny as his own daughter.~ ~
 9    XI| friendship made her own domestics regard her with quite different
10  XIII|     fox-hunt, lest my dogs should regard me as an Actæon."~ ~"To
11   XVI|           he was! Fanny durst not regard him at that moment. Rudolf
12   XVI|      certainly have no particular regard for a woman's reputation.
13   XVI|        world to me? Let everybody regard me as a light woman for
14  XVII|    faint-heartedness, this veiled regard for coquetry, and he believed
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