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1 3 | of the old navy. He had won the confidence~of de Suffren
2 4 | luck, fifty sous might be~won,more capital than any person
3 4 | reimbursement in case they won. An old bachelor~could allow
4 4 | chevalier were~required to have won; otherwise the offer would
5 4 | return home (if she had not won herself), would be cold
6 4 | rector of cheating when he won the basket.~ ~"It is singular,"
7 4 | at Les Touches,perhaps he won't come in all night."~ ~
8 8 | it was all fair play. She won my esteem and friendship
9 10| Mademoiselle du Guenic.~ ~"That won't kill him, mademoiselle;
10 10| return to us soon."~ ~"It won't take me ten minutes,"
11 11| shall love her."~ ~"You won't see her again."~ ~"Oh!
12 16| changes inside the house, won't you, Calyste?" she~said.~ ~"
13 17| my dignity, I should~have won only the cold joys (or pains)
14 17| no wrong. You have easily~won happiness; you have only
15 19| Ursula and Sabine, had been won to this~friendship by the
16 19| turned, I feel~it. They won't come at once unless you
17 19| Monsieur de Trailles who won that money from you," he
18 21| If my mother's conscience won't let her act, II~myself
19 22| Gaillard, who, in 1838, had won the advantage over her of
20 22| understand the position won in five years by Madame
21 23| now seems that reputations won by~toil, by services rendered,
22 25| settled," said Maxime.~ ~"Oh! won't it be dull to live in
23 25| mean that?but the pigeon won't fly."~ ~"And he is very
24 25| are afraid of mamma you won't do for me."~ ~"Josephine!"
25 25| nonsense," she said. "It won't prevent you from making
26 25| love Aurelie too well; I won't give her any reason to
27 25| Debats" a novelette which won him in a few days a~reputation
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