Chapter

 1       IX|         as if to seize her and bear her away; but she checked
 2       XI|      cruelly. Exile is hard to bear. But if sorrows and deceptions
 3     XVII| Maurice will despise me! I can bear anything, yes, everything
 4     XVII|      he felt that he could not bear to witness it, that it would
 5    XXIII|      gallant steed which would bear him beyond the reach of
 6      XXV|       the couriers who were to bear the despatches.~ ~The priest
 7     XXXI|       place it on his cart and bear it to Montaignac. He would
 8     XXXI|    expose you to danger. I can bear this life no longer; I have
 9        L|     was to grow, flourish, and bear fruit, had just taken root
10      LII|      an honest man, but I will bear it for your sake. If you
11     LIII|    declared, all the harder to bear since she had wanted for
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