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1 2 | them, she was dressed in a gown~of black velvet, for the
2 2 | kept in the bosom of her gown,~and passed it between her
3 3 | the two~apertures of her gown through which she reached
4 5 | like that of his~mother's gown, trimmed with silver buttons,
5 5 | a coat and the mother a gown of velvet; but Fanny~O'Brien
6 7 | sat there in her morning gown. On her head was one of
7 8 | She has only to put on a gown of cherry~velvet with clouds
8 9 | charming roguishness. A gown of~white muslin, strewn
9 10| ribbon. She wore a~muslin gown with a pattern of flowers,
10 13| movement of a foot beneath a gown, the almost imperceptible
11 13| Beatrix, in her morning gown, with a~chilling air and
12 14| hair fluffy beneath it, a gown of some gray~woollen stuff,
13 14| down into the sea if her gown had not caught upon a point
14 16| the placket-holes of her gown, unfastened the petticoat~
15 18| coming was awaited. The gown, made like a wrapper to
16 20| sought the breast beneath the gown.~ ~"He remembers,he, at
17 20| upon them; she tore off the gown and scarf and~trampled them
18 22| Musard) she danced in a gown, hat, and mantle that were~
19 22| of an outrageously muddy~gown. In short, she had by this
20 25| pelerine of spidery texture, a gown of blue velvet,~the graceful
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