CHAPTER III A BURIAL; AN OCCASION TO BE BORN AGAIN In the spring of 1832, although the cholera ...
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CHAPTER V ORIGINALITY OF PARIS During the last two years, as we have said, Paris had witnessed ...
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CHAPTER IV THE EBULLITIONS OF FORMER DAYS Nothing is more extraordinary than the first breaking...
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CHAPTER III JUST INDIGNATION OF A HAIR-DRESSER The worthy hair-dresser who had chased from his ...
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CHAPTER II GAVROCHE ON THE MARCH The brandishing of a triggerless pistol, grasped in one's hand...
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CHAPTER VI RECRUITS The band augmented every moment. Near the Rue des Billettes, a man of lofty...
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CHAPTER V THE OLD MAN Let us recount what had taken place. Enjolras and his friends had been o...
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CHAPTER IV THE CHILD IS AMAZED AT THE OLD MAN In the meantime, in the Marche Saint-Jean, where ...
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CHAPTER III NIGHT BEGINS TO DESCEND UPON GRANTAIRE The spot was, in fact, admirably adapted, th...
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CHAPTER II PRELIMINARY GAYETIES Laigle de Meaux, as the reader knows, lived more with Joly than...
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BOOK TWELFTH.--CORINTHE CHAPTER I HISTORY OF CORINTHE FROM ITS FOUNDATION The Parisians who no...
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CHAPTER V PREPARATIONS The journals of the day which said that that nearly impregnable structur...
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CHAPTER IV AN ATTEMPT TO CONSOLE THE WIDOW HUCHELOUP Bahorel, in ecstasies over the barricade, ...
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