Chapter

 1      III|      his son to the care of a relative of his wife, and began his
 2     XVII|     inquired the impoverished relative.~ ~Mlle. Blanche replied
 3     XVII|     As usual, the impecunious relative assented, and her niece
 4     XLII|    cat, as for the death of a relative.~ ~But Blanche bravely resolved
 5     XLII|      freak!” groaned the poor relative, overcome with fatigue; “
 6     XLVI|  Medea!” she exclaimed.~ ~Her relative was beside her; like one
 7   XLVIII|      power to annihilate this relative—this witness who might ruin
 8   XLVIII| perfectly frank, to teach her relative her lesson, and to imbue
 9   XLVIII|   submission of her dependent relative. Convinced of this, she
10       LI|   quite plain that the humble relative was becoming bold, even
11       LI|     vive,” thought the humble relative. “God only knows with what
12       LI|       in her treatment of her relative, would have found abundant
13      LII|     occasions, and the humble relative expressed her satisfaction
14     LIII|       so much for that absurd relative of hers?”~ ~But the dejection
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