Chapter

 1      III|       obliged to endure in their exile.~ ~On the contrary, he had
 2        V|       Under these circumstances, exile from Paris seemed an actual
 3      VII|         his former companions in exile, the Marquis de Courtornieu,
 4        X|          that had been passed in exile.~ ~So, rising before nine
 5       XI|        who has suffered cruelly. Exile is hard to bear. But if
 6     XIII| consulate, when he returned from exile. He dissimulated them even
 7       XV|        time to shake the dust of exile from his feet, and already
 8     XXII|    excuse for sending a man into exile.~ ~Fully decided upon this
 9     XXXI|     ruins us, and drives us into exile. We will see.”~ ~The fugitives
10      LIV|          it by condemning you to exile would be unjust. Remain
11      LIV|       ambition to satisfy?~ ~The exile which had weighed so heavily
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