Chapter

 1      XVI|           upon the stage is not a crime.”~ ~“No; but it is a crime
 2      XVI|        crime.”~ ~“No; but it is a crime to deceive one’s father
 3      XVI|        wretched man meditate some crime?”~ ~He glanced at Chanlouineau,
 4    XVIII|      accept this offer would be a crime!”~ ~“A crime! And why, if
 5    XVIII|           would be a crime!”~ ~“A crime! And why, if you please?”~ ~“
 6    XXIII|      heart. Hatred had led him to crime. He loathed himself for
 7     XXIV|         of the Emperor? That is a crime, as you very well know.
 8   XXVIII|          man would be too great a crime. God will not permit it.”~ ~
 9   XXVIII|        the King consent to such a crime? No. A king can refuse mercy,
10   XXVIII|          a man falsely is a great crime,” murmured the honest Marie-Anne.~ ~“
11   XXXIII|           public road. This was a crime which Mlle. de Courtornieu
12      XLI|      shoot me down. Would it be a crime to save me from such suffering?
13     XLIV|         happy life. It would be a crime for me to mix you up with
14     XLIV|            rancor, vengeance, and crime, and a voice whispered that
15      XLV|           hated rival.~ ~When the crime was discovered she would
16      XLV|          she was conscious of her crime, the excess of her hatred
17     XLVI|          commission of a terrible crime—the stupor of the murderer.~ ~
18     XLVI|           had committed a useless crime; she had murdered an innocent
19     XLVI|          of chains— complicity in crime.~ ~He saw himself on the
20    XLVII|          not he who conceived the crime. You will have to seek higher
21    XLVII|     refuse this honor; that was a crime for which she must be punished.
22    XLVII|       possibly be the result of a crime?~ ~He had carefully examined
23    XLVII|          perished the victim of a crime!” he exclaimed.~ ~“Some
24    XLVII|      disgrace, did she commit the crime committed by so many other
25   XLVIII|           living reproach for her crime.~ ~“You do not answer me,”
26   XLVIII| exclamation when she heard of the crime which had been committed
27   XLVIII|      anything in expiation of her crime, and that she would brave
28   XLVIII|          niece, with her dreadful crime still fresh in her mind,
29   XLVIII|     rendered the execution of the crime an easy matter.~ ~For it
30   XLVIII|       that he knew nothing of her crime. She noticed his emotion,
31   XLVIII|      assassinated, soon after his crime, by a certain Balstain,
32        L|          use in speaking of their crime.~ ~Such had been the opinion
33        L|  unravelling all the mysteries of crime.~ ~Aunt Medea was half crazed
34        L|        which she had felt for the crime at the Borderie.~ ~The inquest
35        L|         the very evening that the crime was committed? The testimony
36        L|         morning that followed her crime, she almost shrugged her
37        L|           But sleep had fled. Her crime was ever in her thoughts;
38       LI|        made me pay dearly for the crime of being poor. How you have
39      LII|          immediately followed her crime. It was not against phantoms
40     LIII|          that by profiting by the crime of her niece she had been
41     LIII| acquainted with the secret of the crime at the Borderie.~ ~Everyone
42     LIII|  sang-froid of a stern avenger of crime.~ ~That was his only motive
43     LIII|        favors because he knew the crime she had committed—that crime
44     LIII|      crime she had committed—that crime in which his father had
45      LIV|      right; happiness is almost a crime.~ ~So thought Martial; and
46      LIV|           of a trial in which the crime committed at the Borderie
47      LIV|           who were capable of any crime; and an unfortunate youth
48       LV|            and, in that case, the crime at the Borderie, and the
49       LV|           I forgive you—you whose crime has been so frightfully
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