1 He could not doubt his own identity.
Les Misérables 5 By Victor HugoContextHighlight In BOOK 5: CHAPTER VIII—TWO MEN IMPOSSIBLE TO FIND 2 The croak would be almost identical.
Les Misérables 4 By Victor HugoContextHighlight In BOOK 11: CHAPTER II—GAVROCHE ON THE MARCH 3 There was no identity to be established.
Les Misérables 1 By Victor HugoContextHighlight In BOOK 7: CHAPTER VII—THE TRAVELLER ON HIS ARRIVAL TAKES ... 4 Ideal, absolute, perfection, infinity: identical words.
Les Misérables 2 By Victor HugoContextHighlight In BOOK 7: CHAPTER VI—THE ABSOLUTE GOODNESS OF PRAYER 5 From an identical school, an identical society will spring.
Les Misérables 5 By Victor HugoContextHighlight In BOOK 1: CHAPTER V—THE HORIZON WHICH ONE BEHOLDS FROM THE SUMMIT ... 6 This identity of concession which each makes to all, is called Equality.
Les Misérables 5 By Victor HugoContextHighlight In BOOK 1: CHAPTER V—THE HORIZON WHICH ONE BEHOLDS FROM THE SUMMIT ... 7 In Paris, the identity which binds an individual to himself is broken between one street and another.
Les Misérables 4 By Victor HugoContextHighlight In BOOK 6: CHAPTER I—THE MALICIOUS PLAYFULNESS OF THE WIND 8 The hair was the same, also the profile, so far as the cap permitted a view of it, the mien identical, only more depressed.
Les Misérables 3 By Victor HugoContextHighlight In BOOK 8: CHAPTER I—MARIUS, WHILE SEEKING A GIRL IN A BONNET, ... 9 However, apart from the identity which he could not manage to catch, Boulatruelle put things together and made calculations.
Les Misérables 5 By Victor HugoContextHighlight In BOOK 5: CHAPTER I—IN WHICH THE TREE WITH THE ZINC PLASTER APPEARS ... 10 The fact was assured, nevertheless, and Marius could not doubt it, unless he doubted his own identity, as we have just said.
Les Misérables 5 By Victor HugoContextHighlight In BOOK 5: CHAPTER VIII—TWO MEN IMPOSSIBLE TO FIND 11 They return, spectres, but always identical; only, they no longer bear the same names and they are no longer in the same skins.
Les Misérables 3 By Victor HugoContextHighlight In BOOK 7: CHAPTER IV—COMPOSITION OF THE TROUPE 12 The lawyer wound up by beseeching the jury and the court, if the identity of Jean Valjean appeared to them to be evident, to apply to him the police penalties which are provided for a criminal who has broken his ban, and not the frightful chastisement which descends upon the convict guilty of a second offence.
Les Misérables 1 By Victor HugoContextHighlight In BOOK 7: CHAPTER IX—A PLACE WHERE CONVICTIONS ARE IN PROCESS OF ... 13 There are a few less deaths from hunger with you, and a few more from fever; your social hygiene is not much better than ours; shadows, which are Protestant in England, are Catholic in Italy; but, under different names, the vescovo is identical with the bishop, and it always means night, and of pretty nearly the same quality.
Les Misérables 5 By Victor HugoContextHighlight In BOOK 9: CHAPTER VI—THE GRASS COVERS AND THE RAIN EFFACES