Chapter

 1        V|          had recovered from that stupor—that gift of God—which follows
 2       XI|          voice, changed first to stupor, then to indignation, as
 3      XXX|          betrayed something like stupor.~ ~“What! you would do this—
 4  XXXVIII|        him, aroused him from his stupor, and the consciousness of
 5    XLIII|     insanity and delirium to the stupor of idiocy.~ ~The physician
 6     XLIV| appearance?”~ ~She shook off the stupor that paralyzed her, and
 7     XLVI|       not yet fright, it was the stupor that follows the commission
 8     XLVI|          of a terrible crime—the stupor of the murderer.~ ~Still,
 9     XLVI|     terrible thought pierced the stupor which enveloped her that
10        L|    impression. She shook off the stupor that was creeping over her,
11      LIV|    breath, changed the momentary stupor of their assailants into
12       LV|    beginning to recover from his stupor and despondency; and when
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