Chapter

1       II|           pleading in behalf of a bad cause produced no impression
2      XIV|          the proposed measure was badimpolitic.~ ~“Monsieur d’
3    XXIII|          it hers. Lacheneur was a bad father. There was a day
4     XXIV|          a sneering air.~ ~“Not a bad invention!” said he. “Only
5     XXVI|           his countenance good or bad, they said to the jailer
6   XLVIII|          as Chupin, a notoriously bad character, had entered the
7     XLIX|       common parlance, “come to a bad end.”~ ~Victors and vanquished
8       LI|          doors, on account of the bad weather, she was not inclined
9       LV| fortuitous circumstances, good or bad. He was a man of vast experience,
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