Chapter

 1      III|         he was born—where he had played as a child, and of which
 2      III|       misfortunes.~ ~So while he played with his knife and fork,
 3       IV|           Monsieur Lacheneur has played the part of lord of the
 4       VI|            As children, they had played together in the magnificent
 5       VI|      same pitiful farce that was played in Paris, only on a smaller
 6     XIII|          under the Empire—for he played the part of a kind of chamberlain
 7     XVII|         With what perfection she played her part in the divine comedy
 8     XXIV|       which he and the baron had played during this unfortunate
 9    XXVII|         Marquis de Sairmeuse has played in this affair—whether he
10    XXVII|    indulgence,” he said. “I have played, I have lost; here is my
11    XXXVI|        odious role which she had played with Maurice, Martial, and
12     XLII| unimportant; but cleverly as she played her part, Chupin was not
13        L|        of Martial’s visit.~ ~She played her part so well, that,
14     LIII|  circumstances; and that she had played the role of a happy, contented
15      LIV|         Place dItalie.~ ~He had played his part so perfectly, that
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