Book, Chapter

1  Int,   4|        is one of the ironies of fate that caused this deformed
2    1,   6| Painting also suffered the same fate when the presumption of
3    4, 119|   epitaph for the dead man:~HIS FATE WAS UNAVOIDABLE~NO ROCK-HEWN
4    4, 127|       and advantage extort from Fate's mandate.~The depth of
5    5, 145|        and left Eumolpus to his fate. I learned, a few days later,
6    5, 145|       and of civilization. When Fate turns the leaves of the
7    6     |        the living and the dead.~Fate, however, has often avenged
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