Chapter
1 2| children. Then he worked an hour or two; that is to say,
2 2| Madame Rabourdin heard the hour~strike when she was to have
3 2| hackney-coach (hired by~the hour for these costly entertainments),
4 4| days together at the same hour."~ ~The two nephews looked
5 4| Antoine, a quarter of an hour later, to the supernumerary.~ ~"
6 4| here till five o'clock, an hour~after all the others have
7 4| asked him to stay~half an hour longer to finish a piece
8 4| in~his seat at the same hour, warmed himself at the stove
9 5| Rabourdin like the solemn hour in which great~commanders
10 5| said of him. The breakfast-~hour suddenly cut short his meditation.~ ~"
11 5| precautions they~take to keep this hour for private intimacies and
12 5| this is really~the only hour when you can receive him."~ ~
13 6| at the latter's breakfast hour), there is no end to the~
14 6| the day's labor. At this hour the over-~heated rooms cool
15 6| in the courtyards at this hour and exchanged opinions on
16 6| midday, and that after that hour he~can be found only at
17 6| waiting at two francs~an hour. Madame Baudoyer rose and
18 6| Rabourdin was to be, within an hour, the~arbiter of her husband'
19 6| just now; let me have an hour's peace! They cracked~my
20 7| coming forward, "at this hour? What has happened?"~ ~"
21 7| late, about midnight, an hour~when company dwindles and
22 7| supporting him. At the end of the hour the minister's vanity was~
23 7| Madame~Rabourdin not half an hour earlier.~ ~The marquise
24 7| playing boston at a late hour. No one was~present but
25 8| study before the breakfast-~hour, to make sure that La Briere
|