Chapter

 1       II|       Sairmeuse family.~ ~His ambition was modest then. When stretched
 2       II|  accused him of an inordinate ambition for his children; but he
 3     XIII|       wealth and of satisfied ambition. She dreamed of a position
 4      XVI|     son. He has a commendable ambition; he is working faithfully;
 5      XIX|       Marie-Anne had not this ambition. All her thoughts, all her
 6       XX|              CHAPTER XX~ ~Ah! ambition is a fine thing!~ ~The Duc
 7    XXIII|       excitement, a man whose ambition prompted him to display
 8   XXVIII|   influenced by hatred, or by ambition; but I was actuated by neither
 9     XXIX|  willingness to sacrifice his ambition and his future for her sake.~ ~
10   XXXIII|    discovered the calculating ambition and the utter worldliness
11    XXXIX|      only of his disappointed ambition.~ ~Whatever he might pretend,
12        L|    evening, had long been the ambition and the dream of the poor
13     LIII|     in power and in satisfied ambition some relief from his despondency.~ ~
14      LIV| favors to ask, no cravings of ambition to satisfy?~ ~The exile
15       LV| Italie, panting with hope and ambition, he found himself outwitted
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