Chapter

 1       II|      ignorance; he had found the couragewonderful in one of his
 2      III|       his father he owed energy, courage, and, it must also be added,
 3       VI|          upon one, and with rare courage, crowned with still rarer
 4       VI| displeasure.~ ~This gave renewed courage to the anxious lover.~ ~“
 5       IX|      more, and to say this: Have courage, Maurice. Go away—leave
 6       IX|       consent, I should have the courage to refuse mine!”~ ~Maurice
 7     XIII|        of finding you. I had not courage to brave those formidable
 8     XIII|        sudden change. But I have courage; I shall learn~ how to submit.
 9       XV|     worried, mother; I have some courage, as you shall see.”~ ~He
10      XVI|   deceased aunt almost unlimited courage and patience.~ ~For more
11      XVI|   Monsieur, and I shall have the courage to repeat it.”~ ~“But you
12      XVI|         do you seek to impair my courage when I require it all to
13     XVII|         peculiar expression, his courage evaporated. Her weapon was
14    XVIII|         that you must prove your courage. I say even more: fight
15    XVIII|      himself with the impassable courage of a surgeon who does not
16      XIX|           But what can daunt the courage of a lover? Martial endured
17      XIX|       many other proofs of moral courage. He offered to assist M.
18     XXII|          that Chanlouineau found courage to resist.~ ~“That cannot
19    XXIII|        support of his marvellous courage a superhuman strength and
20     XXIV|   beneficial God?”~ ~“Oh! I have courage, Monsieur,” faltered the
21     XXIV|         even now, I have not the courage to curse my folly! Oh, mother,
22     XXIV|        should have had so little courage as to remain in the shelter
23      XXV|          heart has not that much courage! I suffer—I am disgraced
24      XXV|          then, summoning all her courage, she pushed him away, uttering
25     XXVI|          peaceable citizens take courage; let the evil-disposed tremble!
26    XXVII|      solid fellow, of remarkable courage.~ ~Chanlouineau’s eyes during
27    XXVII|          see that the prisoner’s courage does not equal his depravity?
28    XXVII|     their devotion and for their courage.~ ~The good man wept.~ ~
29   XXVIII|      priest was trying to gather courage to tell her the cruel truth,
30   XXVIII|        doing so, but had not the courage. To see you, to hear your
31     XXIX|        my promptness and upon my courage depends the life of an innocent
32     XXIX|     baron hung upon Marie-Anne’s courage and address. The consciousness
33      XXX|       his noisy lamentations.~ ~“Courage, my boy,” he said, indignant
34      XXX|       mother~ embrace you. Hope, courage!”~ ~Beneath these few lines
35     XXXI|          house; for to muster up courage for the act they were about
36   XXXIII|  authority; but the duke had not courage to do it.~ ~M. de Courtornieu
37     XXXV|      aloud, as if to spur on his courage. “Come, my friend, spit
38     XXXV|        it requires quite as much courage as it does to go and fight.”~ ~“
39     XXXV|        but many deeds of sublime courage and devotion were performed.~ ~
40  XXXVIII|          neared the chateau, his courage failed him.~ ~The guests
41     XLII|    dependent of all strength and courage; “quite enough.”~ ~Then,
42     XLII|      Blanche summoned sufficient courage to approach him. For more
43     XLIV|          last, summoning all his courage, he said:~ ~“It would be
44     XLVI|          Martial with the odious courage to forsake me, his wife,
45     XLVI|          her victim. She had not courage to do this, and recoiled
46    XLVII| Marie-Anne——”~ ~He hesitated.~ ~“Courage, Maurice,” murmured the
47    XLVII|    Maurice,” murmured the abbe. “Courage!”~ ~The stricken man tottered
48    XLVII|        priest, gently, “be calm. Courage!”~ ~He turned with an expression
49    XLVII|   faltered, “that is what I needcourage!”~ ~He staggered; they were
50   XLVIII|        extreme fear gave her the courage that not unfrequently animates
51        L|       sunshine, she regained her courage, and became sceptical again.
52       LI| satisfied.~ ~“I shall never have courage to stay all alone in this
53      LII|    Blanche sank, and yet she had courage to cast a glance of disdain
54      LII|        his father’s story.~ ~The courage and heroism displayed by
55      LIV|          utmost violence, he had courage to assume the sole~ responsibility
56       LV|    presence, he had regained his courage, his command over his faculties,
57       LV|  Segmuller required not a little courage. There had been so much
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