Chapter

 1        V|     shall sell them.”~ ~Was he speaking seriously?~ ~Maurice must
 2        X|         perhaps; but, strictly speaking, not even the means of subsistence.~ ~
 3       XI|   would have sworn that he was speaking the truth, so persuasive
 4      XIX|  persons, and M. Lacheneur was speaking and gesticulating excitedly.~ ~
 5    XXVII|     culprits.~ ~When he ceased speaking, the duke, addressing the
 6    XXVII|        will tell you that I am speaking the truth. Is it not so,
 7    XXVII|       But all the while he was speaking the Duc de Sairmeuse fidgeted
 8    XXVII|      these men say to another, speaking of me: ‘She must get out,
 9   XXXIII|      in the neighborhood.~ ~In speaking of him everyone saidMonsieur
10     XXXV|  gravely, while the priest was speaking. When the abbe had finished:~ ~“
11       XL|      for the supreme insult of speaking to me of his fortune. I
12     XLII| approached Aunt Medea, and was speaking to her with great animation.~ ~
13        L|      accomplices always use in speaking of their crime.~ ~Such had
14        L|  poignant than all the rest.~ ~Speaking one evening of Marie-Anne
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