Chapter

1      XIV|     country,” said he, “he is a frantic Jacobin, and admitted to
2    XXIII|    homes in safety; the others, frantic and despairing, overcome
3   XXXIII| received made him more and more frantic with rage.~ ~“Was the act
4  XXXVIII|       saw Martial de Sairmeuse, frantic with passion, cast into
5  XXXVIII|     will be in it.”~ ~He was so frantic with passion that he forgot
6  XXXVIII|      with disdain, was rendered frantic by the thought that Marie-Anne
7  XXXVIII|        s coolness drove Maurice frantic.~ ~“Well,” he replied, with
8     XLII|     Marie-Anne,” she continued, frantic with rage. “It is the first
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