Chapter
1 I | hundred and thirty-seven people.~“Fact!” replied he. “Still,
2 III | impossible” in not a French one. People have evidently been deceived
3 III | which this homage of a whole people to a single individual attained.~
4 VI | approval.~Until that time most people had been ignorant of the
5 VI | mirror, by means of which people could see each other from
6 VIII | effect out of doors. Timid people took fright at the idea
7 X | lived at Philadelphia.~Most people are aware of the curious
8 XII | lire in the pockets of her people. If she had had Venetia
9 XIV | works by the aid of the people of the country.~Eight days
10 XIV | color. As many of these people brought their families with
11 XVI | was an incessant flow of people to and from Tampa Town and
12 XIX | There three hundred thousand people braved for many hours the
13 XIX | of certain narrow-minded people, who would shut up the human
14 XIX | from the sun! And there are people who affirm that such a thing
15 XXII | hands he shook, how many people he was “hail-fellow-well-met”
16 XXII | day, certain of these poor people, so numerous in America,
17 V | Michel Ardan, “the only people who could bring such an
18 VI | enough oxygen for three people, if only at the bottom of
19 VII | regions; to cultivate them, to people them, to transport thither
20 VIII | with rooms of oxygen, where people whose system is weakened
21 VIII | an assembly only a whole people could be saturated, what
22 VIII | like these matter-of-fact people for bringing one back to
23 XI | sublunary beings. How many people have heard speak of the
24 XIX | alone, “these practical people have sometimes most opportune
25 XXII | our friends are clever people, and they cannot have fallen
26 XXIII| worthy of the American people, and under such conditions
|