Chapter

 1      III|       the returned emigres had learned nothing and forgotten nothing.~ ~
 2       VI| example of her husband she had learned that prosperity, as well
 3       VI|   given to the Emperor. Having learned through Bibiaine, whose
 4      VII|         From him, the peasants learned only the bare fact; and
 5       XI|     phlegm whose secret he had learned in England.~ ~He was too
 6     XVII|           But what she had not learned was that the most clever
 7     XVII|     shedding real tears.~ ~She learned this one evening, when a
 8     XVII|       she would certainly have learned the secret of her former
 9    XXIII|     with M. de Courtornieu, he learned that Martial had arrived
10    XXIII|      It was through him that I learned of this vast conspiracy
11     XXIV|     became uneasiness when she learned that her husband had departed
12      XXV|     she would forgive when she learned the truth.~ ~Loving and
13     XXVI|  really terrified. He had just learned that the military commission
14     XXXI|         the innkeeper, who had learned, during the day, of the
15   XXXIII|       compassionate keeper, he learned that nothing had been heard
16    XXXVI|     decided on the day when I~ learned that you could marry none
17     XLIV|   froze in her veins.~ ~Having learned that Jean was roving about
18    XLVII|      did not despair.~ ~What a learned doctor would not have dared
19        L|      him, Blanche and her aunt learned that suspicion pointed to
20     LIII|     evening of his arrival, he learned through a garrulous old
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