Chapter

 1        I|    cure.~ ~Then one might have witnessed a singular spectacle.~ ~
 2      III|       events which he had just witnessed in Paris, and by insisting
 3       XI|       by the scene he had just witnessed, and stupefied by what he
 4      XVI| standing with folded arms, had witnessed this scene with the air
 5     XVII|      much amazed as if she had witnessed a miracle.~ ~M. de Courtornieu
 6    XXXII|        well what those who had witnessed his apparent weakness would
 7   XXXVII|        Jean Lacheneur, who had witnessed this scene, now approached.~ ~“
 8  XXXVIII|       the gilded door-post, he witnessed the terrible scene in the
 9      XLI|      who, from a distance, had witnessed the preliminaries of the
10     XLVI|        that which she had just witnessed. She knew that poison caused
11     XLVI|      up by the cure of Vigano, witnessed by the old physician and
12    XLVII|         Of all the persons who witnessed Baron dEscorval’s terrible
13      LIV|       the same servant who had witnessed Aunt Medea’s last agony.~ ~
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