Chapter

 1    IV| superiority. No sordid work, no domestic occupations for them! No,
 2    IV| frightful inroads; and when the domestic table was spread, the invisible
 3   VII|     festival was the signal for domestic storms. The festival itself
 4  VIII|         have the joy of a happy domestic life which I have never
 5    IX|       their gift, on the modest domestic joys that she had left behind
 6    IX|        disagreeable features of domestic life. And the girl knew
 7     X|   beneath the crosses of a hard domestic life; and they all find
 8     X|     that greatest of blessings, domestic happiness, has fallen to
 9   XVI|      masculine gender, in their domestic circles lose very much of
10   XVI|         is born to beautify the domestic circle, woman is always
11  XVII|       everybody had gone. Not a domestic was near. And with this
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