Chapter

 1       II|       him back to the terrible reality. The gate leading to the
 2       IV|   separated the dream from the reality.~ ~A beseeching word uttered
 3        V|      to appear calm, while, in reality, he was beside himself with
 4      VII|       opinion, vulgar; but, in reality, he was delighted, charmed.~ ~
 5     XXIV|        recalled to the present reality.~ ~She recognized Marie-Anne
 6    XXXII|    frighten his father; but in reality he considered the threat
 7   XXXVII| influenced by threats, when in reality, he had yielded only to
 8    XXXIX|       by no means equalled the reality.~ ~Had a thunder-bolt burst
 9     XLVI|  sensibility, but which is, in reality, the grossest selfishness.~ ~
10     XLIX|    What remained to attest the reality of all these events, which,
11        L|       Marquise de Sairmeuse in reality as well as in name. My husband
12        L|  apparition—it was a frightful reality.~ ~But hers was not a nature
13       LI|     nothing, in appearance; in reality, it was monstrous, amazing.
14     LIII|      appearance, so natural in reality.~ ~The head of a family,
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