Chapter

 1       II|          did not forget his past hopes at the moment when they
 2       II|  struggles and its miseries, its hopes and its fears, its unexpected
 3       II| unexpected joys and its blighted hopes, all passed before him.~ ~
 4       IV|          distinguish between the hopes of the emigres and the possible.
 5     VIII|   himself to be deluded by false hopes. Although at first, his
 6       IX|         one’s self against one’s hopes.~ ~It was not until he heard
 7      XII|          bid farewell to all his hopes.~ ~“You surely will not
 8      XIV|            In fact, what did the hopes and plans of these people
 9     XVII|    disappointed all her father’s hopes by rejecting him.~ ~“He
10    XVIII|          make no allusion to the hopes he, himself, entertained.~ ~“
11    XVIII|     preparations, if I share his hopes and his dangers, it will
12    XVIII|   Lacheneur, “I must tell you my hopes, and acquaint you with the
13      XXI|           What! upon these frail hopes, you dare to peril the lives
14      XXI|          did not share all their hopes.~ ~“No, there must be no
15     XXII|     leaving the chateau; and her hopes overflowed in incoherent
16     XXVI|       useless, and destroyed his hopes of saving his friend.~ ~
17   XXVIII|      Chanlouineau’s promises and hopes, and bewildered by her distress,
18     XXIX|          to delude me with false hopes? That would be cruel!”~ ~“
19      XXX|       deluded himself with false hopes.~ ~“I am a lost man,” he
20     XXXI|          suspect the designs and hopes of his former comrades;
21     XXXI|  continued his exposition of his hopes and fears.~ ~“Wounded and
22    XXXII|          one who did not see his hopes of advancement blighted
23    XXXII|       might ruin their ambitious hopes forever.~ ~They trembled
24     XXXV|         evident that Lacheneur’s hopes had not been without some
25    XXXVI|      cherished ambitions, of her hopes, of her fortune, of her
26     XLII|       youth, of her life, of her hopes, and even of her dreams.~ ~
27     XLIV|          was wrong to confide my hopes to you. Do not make me regret
28       LI|       was beginning to entertain hopes of a new and better life,
29     LIII| Marie-Anne had destroyed all his hopes of happiness; and realizing
30     LIII|          he did not renounce his hopes. His was a rancor which
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