Chapter

 1       IX|       sorrows? His friends have deserted him; shall I, his daughter,
 2    XXIII|       crossroads. The place was deserted. At the entrance of one
 3    XXIII|       the morning—the place was deserted.~ ~Nothing disturbed the
 4   XXVIII|         have supposed the hotel deserted. At last, a little before
 5     XXXI|        the place was silent and deserted. Not far from him, he saw
 6    XXXII|    every side; the streets were deserted, and the doors and shutters
 7   XXXIII|       fascinated him—Chupin had deserted the house of the Duc de
 8    XXXIX|    aggravated the misery of the deserted wife, for that she was deserted
 9    XXXIX| deserted wife, for that she was deserted she did not doubt for a
10    XXXIX|   terrible blow. She was indeed deserted, and deserted, as she supposed,
11    XXXIX|        was indeed deserted, and deserted, as she supposed, for another.~ ~“
12       XL|  married yesterday; to-day I am deserted. It would have been generous
13     XLII|        and that her husband has deserted her?” they queried.~ ~Alas!
14    XLVII|     house would seem gloomy and deserted after they left it.~ ~He
15      LIV|       office-seekers, empty and deserted, he laughed, and his laugh
16      LIV|         said he; “the rats have deserted it.”~ ~He did not even pale
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