Chapter
1 1| what the~gambler is to the game; that which he wins he puts
2 1| Germany? The rather silly game of what are called "constitutional~
3 2| believed she could play her own game with this~political roue;
4 3| were playing a~virtuous game of boston with their confessor,
5 3| not to~let others see his game; to shave himself regularly
6 3| from~the ministry, found a game of boston in full blast;
7 4| bouillote, at five sous a game, and were regaled~with cakes
8 4| played dominoes, the only game~he was capable of understanding.
9 5| stolidly]. "Let me see your game."~ ~Dutocq. "I don't wish
10 5| him as adversary in the game a sharper like~des Lupeaulx.
11 5| discover the object of the game which the secretary was
12 6| only backing the devil's game."~ ~Du Bruel. "Who do you
13 6| declares he backs the devil's game~when it is a question of
14 6| that the devil~plays any game at all, and then find out
15 6| and then find out what game; possibly dominoes"~[blows
16 6| were sitting down to their game of boston,~Elisabeth and
17 6| Gigonnet?"~ ~"It's a clever game," said Metivier.~ ~"We'll
18 6| evidently serious. He knew the game, and he saw that the~man
19 6| the~minister was a daring game! He recognized the pen of
20 6| morning with~an account of the game of chess I should play with
21 7| said Rabourdin; "but the~game you are playing is just
22 7| mistaking the dog for the~game," she added, after a pause. "
23 8| so doing you'll play the game of all the big people, and
24 8| was backing the~devil's game, and that your bureau owes
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