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lifewa��asoneo����she was happier now than she had been for a long time; she heard every now and then from her father and rosalie, her husband was with her, and her love for the aunt, who was their good angel, ever increased. but still the terrible death of her mother, sister, and grandmother cast its shadow over her life, added to which was her uncertainty about adrienne.��muchol��essitatethe��whyyousho��ould.now��sandchurc��r��chaledem����b��desiey��
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doctor bronson followed him a minute later, and heard something like the following:����another of her introductions was to prince von kaunitz, the great minister of maria theresa, whose power and influence had been such that he was called le cocher de l��europe; [41] and whose disinterested single-minded patriotism was shown in his answer, when, having proposed a certain field-marshal as president of the council of war, the empress remarked������suddenly into the blanks, into the black erasures, there stole the images which just now he had tried in vain to recall. all else was erased, and norah filled the empty spaces. her presence, voice and gesture and form pervaded his whole consciousness: there was room for nothing else. they loved each other, and to each other they constituted the sum of all that was real. there was nothing for it but to accept that, to go away together, and let all the unrealities of life, the cedars, the salmon, the slippers, pass out of focus, be dissolved, disintegrated.... and yet, and yet he knew that he did not make the choice with his whole self. deep down in him, the very foundation on which his character was built, was that hidden rock of his integrity, of his stern puritanism, of the morality of which his religion was made. he was willing to blow that up, he searched for{305} the explosive that would shatter it, he hacked and hammered at it, as if in experiment to see if he had the power to shatter it. it could hardly be that his character was stronger than himself: that seemed a contradiction in terms.��on they went over the great western railway of canada, and then over the michigan central; and on the morning after leaving niagara they rolled into chicago. here they spent a day in visiting the interesting places in the lake city. an old friend of doctor bronson came to see him at the tremont house, and took the party out for a drive. under the guidance of this hospitable citizen, they were taken to see the city-hall, the stock-yards, the tunnel under the river, the grain-elevators, and other things with which every one who spends a short time in chicago is sure to be made familiar. they were shown the traces of the great fire of 1870, and were shown, too, what progress had been made in rebuilding the city and removing the signs of the calamity. before they finished their tour, they had absorbed much of the enthusiasm of their guide, and were ready to pronounce chicago the most remarkable city of the present time.��the conversation was presently interrupted by a young man whom nobody seemed to know.��the strong affection between alexander i. and his mother lasted as long as she lived.��
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