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1 1 | carriage in Guerande, that of a lady or some invalid going to~
2 3 | footsteps of~the coming lady, who was accompanied by
3 3 | immutable pattern. The old lady still used the cane with
4 3 | punished him," said the old lady; "he has nothing but~daughters,
5 3 | This man, fussy as~a fine lady, worried by the slightest /
6 4 | page had gone in, the old lady answered, confidentially,
7 8 | Montcornet told~him of a young lady in the department of the
8 8 | that~the life of a great lady sets up about a woman in
9 10| breakfast-table.~ ~"No; but a fine lady, a marquise, has come to
10 10| Madame de Kergarouet. "Poor lady! is she~legally separated?"~ ~"
11 11| brought up like a true Irish lady to make and~pour out tea (
12 14| to~us, for she's a /good/ lady."~ ~The two parties bowed
13 17| laugh at such things;" "No lady ever flings herself on a~
14 18| Athenais will be~sovereign lady; but I who fear lest I can
15 21| looked at the Portuguese lady, and was pensive.~ ~"That
16 22| made me half a wife and~a lady, and that's more than you
17 23| Schontz, who plays the great lady, and whose~intrinsic value
18 25| Maxime, drawing the pious lady into the~embrasure of a
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