Chapter

 1     1|      was a disaster for him. He felt lost, done for, and, losing
 2     1|       last ideal, M. Thiers, he felt a check put on all his attempts
 3     1|       in the street he suddenly felt an attack of dizziness which
 4     1|         each kind. And Patissot felt himself more like a fisherman
 5     2|          absorbed in the sport, felt a vague kind of uneasiness;
 6     2|     took on a definite form. He felt, indeed, as though he were
 7     2|        line out rapidly when he felt it caught in something behind
 8     3|       so terribly that Patissot felt a vague desire to retrace
 9     3| ironical look was piercing, one felt that behind it there was
10     6|      most unassuming, the least felt, the most liberal, in the
11     6|          monsieur."~ ~The anger felt by all the guests prevented
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