Chapter

 1        I|                  to me.”~ ~This was such a strange assertion that his listeners
 2       II|               gestures.~ ~His actions were strange, incomprehensible. Sometimes
 3       II|                 belonged to me.”~ ~At this strange avowal the young girl turned
 4      III|            powerful voices; and it was not strange that the duke believed the
 5      III| distinguished-looking cavalier. It was not strange that women raved over his
 6        V|               growled Lacheneur.~ ~By some strange fatality no one chanced
 7      XII|                    discover this motive. A strange scene awaited him. In the
 8      XIV|                 controlled by one of those strange passions in which the heart
 9      XVI|              thinner; but her beauty had a strange and touching charm—the sublime
10     XVII|                   utter it, prevented by a strange expression on the face of
11     XVII|                 she comprehended that this strange visit concealed some mystery—
12      XIX|               wended their way onward.~ ~A strange sight met their eyes as
13    XXIII|                 signal to fire.~ ~Still, a strange thing happened. Of four
14    XXIII|                   time to investigate this strange occurrence now. He leaped
15    XXIII|                despairing, overcome by the strange vertigo that seizes the
16     XXIV|                   all this mean? Why these strange precautions?~ ~Mme. dEscorval
17    XXVII|                signed his death-warrant.~ ~Strange caprice of destiny! He was
18   XXVIII|              divined it by the aid of that strange prescience which so often
19    XXXII|             Martial, thoughtfully.~ ~“Very strange!” approved M. de Courtornieu.~ ~“
20    XXXII|           officious, replied briefly; and, strange to say, did not offer his
21   XXXIII|             satisfy Martial.~ ~“It is very strange,” he thought, “that Monsieur
22    XXXVI|                    a painful dream.~ ~What strange and terrible events had
23  XXXVIII|                      We fear informers!”~ ~Strange as it may appear to one
24      XLI|               flies from mouth to mouth.~ ~Strange as it may seem, the news
25      XLI|                 rushing back to relate the strange events of the evening to
26      XLI|                    it likewise, that these strange events rendered their situation
27     XLII|              morning his actions were very strange, and—and—when he returned——”~ ~
28    XLIII|                 him from her window with a strange terror in her heart.~ ~But
29      XLV|             distended and glittered with a strange brilliancy. She let the
30     XLVI|                    to scorch her feet.~ ~A strange, inexplicable sensation
31     XLVI|                    failed her; there was a strange ringing in her ears, a cold
32    XLVII|                    the cart.~ ~“It is very strange that Marie-Anne does not
33    XLVII|                   the door, and Jean saw a strange spectacle.~ ~The traitor’
34    XLVII|                  the back room.~ ~“That is strange,” he said to himself. “Who
35    XLVII|                    our detention seemed so strange and became so insupportable
36     XLIX|                  de Sairmeuse.~ ~It seemed strange that such an excellent rider
37     XLIX|                 articles he burned.~ ~This strange act was the talk of the
38        L|               These new joys awakened many strange thoughts in her mind, and
39     LIII|             astonished by it.~ ~“Is it not strange,” remarked her friends, “
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