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1 2 | bitter sadness.~ ~About six o'clock on the evening of
2 3 | penetrate. For the last six years the rector coughed~
3 5 | expenses that in a family~of six persons compelled to live
4 6 | she had come some five or six times to Les Touches.~Her
5 7 | opens an immense salon with six windows, and the dining-room.
6 8 | lurking and cowardly for six months, and murderous the~
7 9 | rooms. It was then about six o'clock; the sun, in~setting,
8 11| These manoeuvres lasted six days, during which time
9 13| good-night and closed the door.~ ~Six o'clock was striking on
10 14| with~him. It was nearly six o'clock. The luscious odors,
11 18| had created her."~ ~About six o'clock Calyste, driven
12 19| to carry away from her six triumphs a week, Beatrix
13 22| Rochefide invested his~six hundred thousand francs
14 23| friend of his father. "In six months I shall be better~
15 25| goes to the five~or the six?"~ ~"Six what?"~ ~"Figures;
16 25| the five~or the six?"~ ~"Six what?"~ ~"Figures; whether
17 25| owed,~myself, as much as six hundred thousand."~ ~La
18 25| me for such a paltry sum,six thousand."~ ~"One is often
19 25| is often more hampered by six thousand than by a hundred~
20 25| your own two feet, have six; do as I~do, I never get
21 25| soak yourself for five or six years in the provinces if
22 25| leaving you. After a lease of six years a woman has a right~
23 26| on Calyste for the last six months.~ ~Since her public
24 26| tranquilly, "here are the~six letters you have done me
25 26| left Paris, has put~out six! If I had had the imprudence
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