Chapter

 1        I|   restlessness of his eye and the expression of his thin lips betrayed
 2       II|         the required oath, and an expression of satisfaction overspread
 3       IV|   humiliation, imparted a sublime expression to her face.~ ~She was so
 4        V|      drunken man, his eye void of expression, his features distorted,
 5       VI|           soon resumed its gloomy expression.~ ~“Believe me, Monsieur
 6       IX|            dazzled by the sublime expression of her face.~ ~Reason returned;
 7       XI|           explanation.”~ ~Such an expression from the lips of this haughty
 8       XI|        voice, so entirely did the expression of his face, his glance,
 9       XI|        cleverness and felicity of expression, began to repeat to the
10      XII|        coldness? What an adorable expression illumined her face, what
11     XVII|           with a certain peculiar expression, his courage evaporated.
12     XVII|            prevented by a strange expression on the face of her friend.
13      XIX|            to use the baron’s own expression, seduced him.~ ~Greatly
14      XXI|           will be betrayed!”~ ~An expression of horror contracted Lacheneur’
15     XXIV|           wore a really ferocious expression.~ ~Behind him, in the passage,
16      XXV|          to the cure, and with an expression of intense covetousness
17     XXIX|     Marie-Anne fancied she saw an expression of relief steal over his
18      XLI|            turned with a peculiar expression to the box of medicine standing
19    XLIII|            so ready to assume any expression which the most consummate
20    XLIII|          lip hung with a terrible expression of stupidity.~ ~And there
21     XLIV|         tatters, his face wore an expression of ferocious despair, and
22    XLVII| Marie-Anne, weeping bitterly. The expression of his face, his attitude,
23    XLVII|     Courage!”~ ~He turned with an expression of complete bewilderment
24    XLVII|      cannot; I do not know.”~ ~An expression of unspeakable anguish stole
25   XLVIII|          must be saved.”~ ~By the expression on the faces of the valets
26        L|           tenderness was only the expression of his sorrow. Whatever
27      LIV|           de chambre returned, an expression of profound consternation
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