Chapter
1 1| coffee, he left home at eight in the morning with~the
2 1| she put in the garret.~ ~Eight years of fruitless expectation
3 1| he give up his salary of eight thousand francs~and perquisites,
4 1| the children (a girl of eight and a boy~of nine, whose
5 2| or~fifteen salons between eight at night and three in the
6 2| department, from a salary of eight thousand a year to twelve
7 2| francs a year instead of~eight thousand.~ ~"And I shall
8 2| Rabourdin among the seven or~eight really superior women in
9 3| brought~in a rental of eight thousand. Falleix paid seven
10 3| Paris at half-past seven or eight o'clock of a winter's morning,
11 4| them, between seven and eight o'clock in the morning;
12 4| from the civil list, and eight hundred from the three hundred~
13 4| a woman of forty-five at eight thousand, or an Englishwoman
14 4| the office. From six to eight o'clock in the morning he
15 4| Saint-Antoine, and from six to eight~o'clock in the evening those
16 4| to it, and at half-past eight~precisely he reached the
17 5| bureau Baudoyer arrived at eight o'clock in the~morning,
18 5| he was dying. There~are eight of us here, and I don't
19 6| all his business between~eight o'clock in the morning and
20 6| eulogy costs us four thousand eight hundred francs, son-in-law!"~
21 6| the place, which is worth eight thousand more, the~sacrifice
22 6| regret the four thousand eight hundred-- Besides,~Baudoyer,
23 7| found them both~waiting. At eight o'clock that evening, Martin
24 7| suspicious and uneasy.~ ~"We knew eight days ago a fact that without
25 8| uniform, when, at a quarter to eight, des Lupeaulx's~servant
26 8| Madame Transon arrived at eight o'clock; Madame Transon
27 8| Rabourdin left the house at eight o'clock, the porter gave
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