Chapter

 1        I|           shouting, with all the power of their lungs:~ ~“Long
 2       II|       empire endured, had been a power in the land.~ ~“Ah! you
 3      III|       that his voice had not the power to check her flood of reproaches,
 4       IV|            Yes, he had still the power to keep Sairmeuse, and he
 5        X|         it, nor did he abuse his power.~ ~Their manner toward each
 6        X|         a little too sure of his power. They lived on a footing
 7       XI|   involuntarily submitted to the power of this beautiful girl?
 8       XI|       arm, and with irresistible power whirled him twice around,
 9     XIII|          tell me, in the growing power of the clergy, and has become
10     XIII|         to the highest sphere of power. Thereupon she had uttered
11      XIV|    Decorations, fortune, honors, power—they desired everything.~ ~
12       XV|        on the Reche, he lost the power of reflecting calmly and
13      XVI|         irrevocable. There is no power in the world capable of
14      XVI|        you are doing all in your power to reassure them. You accept
15      XVI|          more completely in your power when you have lulled their
16     XVII|       heiress distrusted her own power.~ ~She reflected that Martial’
17      XXI|       and the marquis are in the power of our friends.”~ ~The cure
18     XXII|      leaves are scattered by the power of the tempest.~ ~
19    XXIII|      arms that revolved with the power and velocity of the sails
20      XXV|     Armed with the most absolute power, the Duc de Sairmeuse and
21     XXVI|       been granted discretionary power. A military commission will
22    XXVII|       almost deprived him of the power of speech.~ ~“You lie, scoundrel!
23    XXVII|          which it is beyond your power to destroy, and which will
24    XXVII|        all which it was in human power to do to arrest this movement
25     XXIX|          Duc de Sairmeuse in our power. He is omnipotent in Montaignac;
26   XXXIII|        for a week, exercised the power of a dictator, she did not
27    XXXIV|        men who had held absolute power, and who had exercised it
28     XXXV|        he possessed a marvellous power of will, which prevented
29    XXXVI|        that he was in this man’s power.~ ~What should he do?~ ~
30   XXXVII|      poor maimed body remained a power of vitality for which the
31       XL|       his brain, and he lost all power to consider the situation
32     XLII|         is said to exercise such power over those who have lost
33      XLV| possession of her faculties; the power of calm deliberation returned.~ ~
34   XLVIII|        her.~ ~Blanche longed for power to annihilate this relative—
35   XLVIII|        and soul, in Aunt Medea’s power.~ ~But, on the other hand,
36   XLVIII|       was dead; he had it in his power to revoke the benefits he
37        L|       But she was to realize the power of her victim’s threats
38      LII|   intense delight in proving his power and in abusing it.~ ~He
39     LIII|    politics, striving to find in power and in satisfied ambition
40     LIII|       his wife the secret of his power.~ ~“I shall soon know,”
41     LIII|     Chupin.~ ~“Now, she is in my power!” he thought exultantly. “
42      LIV|         an insatiable thirst for power.~ ~He cared little or nothing
43      LIV|  offended and persecuted—were in power; but he did not hesitate.
44      LIV|       compelled to submit to the power of these people, they must
45       LV|      eternal disgrace!~ ~And the power he had wielded in former
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