Chapter

 1     3|          certainly have caused a great effort.~ ~They next visited
 2     3|         frenzied admiration of a great number. He expected to see
 3     3|      word, gave an impression of great strength of character, power
 4     3|          and continued: "It is a great honor for me to speak to
 5     3|        famous painter and of the great novelist as though they
 6     4|          exclaimed:~ ~"That is a great idea, monsieur, which does
 7     5|          reverie, he thanked the Great Unknown for having put so
 8     5|      stretch of river, shaded by great trees which formed an arch
 9     6|      work. A book rummager and a great reader, with a nature continually
10     6|     gentlemen, Schopenhauer, the great philosopher, revered by
11     6| remarkable picture or composed a great opera! Why, gentlemen? Because
12     6|     another passage from another great philosopher, this one an
13     6|         a family, or, perhaps, a great artist, what idea is he
14     6|          one hundred votes for a great land-owner as against his
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