[The Wandering Jew by Eugene Sue]@TWC D-Link book
The Wandering Jew

CHAPTER XVI
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Conceive, what a superior facility of action this immense police-register, which includes the whole world, must give to any one society! It is not lightly that I speak of these registers; I have my facts from a person who has seen this collection, and who is perfectly well acquainted with the Jesuits.

Here then, is matter to reflect on for all those families, who admit freely into their houses the members of a community that carries its biographical researches to such a point.

(Libri, Member of the Institute.

Letters on the Clergy.) When he had conquered the involuntary emotion which the name or remembrance of General Simon had occasioned, Rodin's master said to the secretary: "Do not yet open the letters from Leipsic, Charlestown, and Batavia; the information they contain will doubtless find its place presently.

It will save our going over the same ground twice." The secretary looked inquiringly at his master.
The latter continued--"Have you finished the note relating to the medals ?" "Here it is," replied the secretary; "I was just finishing my interpretation of the cipher." "Read it to me, in the order of the facts.


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