Chapter

1      III|         bring his subjects to a sense of their duty. Twelve hundred
2      III|       of man he is; he has less sense than a baby! Any miserable
3       IV| extortioner to something like a sense of shame, exclaimed:~ ~“
4        V|        most strict and vigorous sense of the word.~ ~She was seldom
5     XIII|        for his opinions, in the sense of having so often been
6      XIV|      and justice. Have the good sense to respect the consideration
7     XLII| perfidious creature lost to all sense of shame.~ ~And yet, though
8       LV|   recalled Lecoq to a realizing sense of the present situation.~ ~
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