Chapter

 1       IX|  gesture that he could not help feeling there was no hope.~ ~“I
 2       XI| vibrated with such intensity of feeling that Marie-Anne could not
 3      XIV|         had it not been for the feeling of jealousy aroused in her
 4      XVI|     respectful deference, and a feeling of profound gratitude.~ ~
 5    XVIII|       poor children.~ ~But if a feeling of remorse entered his mind,
 6      XXI|      convulsively to his heart, feeling that it might be for the
 7   XXVIII|      The abbe had been right in feeling he could trust the officers
 8      XXX|      him two files.~ ~His first feeling was one of distrust. He
 9      XXX|        minutes he experienced a feeling of profound discouragement.~ ~
10   XXXIII|     distasteful to us, and by a feeling of discouragement and despair,
11     XXXV|       the crevices of the rock, feeling with his hands for some
12      XLI|      real moral grandeur in the feeling that induced Martial to
13     XLIV|      she could not overcome the feeling of despondency that stole
14      XLV|    appointments of the chamber, feeling the heavy brocaded silk
15     XLVI|  Blanche, who had experienced a feeling of deadly faintness, was
16    XLVII|           he said, with intense feeling. “You have saved my life.”~ ~“
17     LIII|       and in a voice of intense feeling, she said:~ ~“You have had
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