Chapter

1        I|       impassive countenance, the storm of anger he had aroused.
2       II| love-affair.~ ~Then the terrible storm of the revolution burst
3       II|       will not last long.”~ ~The storm did last, however; and the
4      III|         have taken your house by storm, and hold the position,
5      VII|         and rise again after the storm has passed; such was their
6       IX|        thoughts scattered by the storm of passion which had swept
7       XI|          calm which precedes the storm.~ ~Martial was the first
8    XXVII|   monstrous seance had aroused a storm of indignation and disgust
9     LIII|       the calm that precedes the storm.~ ~A line in a newspaper
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