Chapter

 1    II|         then very much dearer than pure wheat.~ ~Supposing a man
 2     V|   conscious of God, and capable of pure delights, whose tender loving
 3     V|         question should be just as pure, just as innocent, as was
 4     V|           a child. Her heart is as pure as a child's, and her education
 5   VII|         twelve thousand bushels of pure wheat, consequently, the
 6   VII|     cunningly devised fountain the pure wine of Tokay spouted upwards
 7    IX|       observe it."~ ~"Why, this is pure filibustery!" cried Fennimore,
 8     X|          their features into their pure and honest souls, so that
 9   XII|          sunt omnia casta, "To the pure all things are pure," and
10   XII|            the pure all things are pure," and whoever blushed had,
11  XIII|            from among the rest two pure snow-white hounds, and,
12   XVI| extraordinary ideas, of which your pure, childlike mind can form
13  XVII|         lose them. There was not a pure pearl in the Indies that
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