Part,  Chapter

 1   Pres         |         the prosaic practice of law, his father's profession,
 2     II,     III|    should take advantage of the law of possession, and drag
 3     IV,      II|         a letter from the young law student with whom he had
 4     VI,      II|     Article III. of the militia law, which prohibits the noble
 5     VI,      II|  because I look upon the entire law as a jest - mere child's
 6     VI,     III|       cow, farmer.' The militia law is no longer a dead letter.
 7    VII,       I|         Diet passed the militia law without anything having
 8    VII,       I| subordinates. The spring is the law passed by the Diet. The
 9    VII,       I|    office, which has to set the law in motion; the escapement
10    VII,       I|        magnates. Those whom the law compelled to equip ten horsemen
11    VII,      II|         a clergyman and a young law student.~ ~The reality was
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