Chapter

 1       II|     as a child who has never suffered—as cruel as one who, having
 2       XI| father is an old man who has suffered cruelly. Exile is hard to
 3       XI|      he resumed, “all that I suffered last evening in the little
 4     XIII|     opportune moment. He has suffered cruelly for his opinions,
 5     XIII|       The nobility, who have suffered so much during the Revolution,
 6     XIII|    if I said that I have not suffered on~ ~account of this sudden
 7     XIII|    frightful anguish she had suffered during the past two or three
 8      XVI|  Maurice. Believe me, I have suffered cruelly at the thought;
 9     XXVI|      suspect this fact, they suffered an agony of fear and dread
10     XLIV|  knew life; he had loved and suffered, and he possessed two sublime
11     XLIV|    since we have met. I have suffered so much. I have so many
12     XLIV| gently; “your reputation has suffered greatly through the attentions
13     XLVI|    do not crave life; I have suffered so much during the past
14    XLVII|     in heaven to her who had suffered so much upon earth.~ ~But
15   XLVIII|      she asked.~ ~“Because I suffered agony during the three hours
16   XLVIII|       How much you must have suffered, Blanche,” he murmured,
17        L| night to the disquietude she suffered during the day.~ ~For the
18      LII|     intolerable anxiety. She suffered more now than during the
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