Chapter
1 3| the ideas simple. A new hat~for Saillard was a matter
2 3| loose under a three-cornered hat, wore breeches with~straps
3 3| his tea and to take his hat.~ ~On the evening of which
4 4| all~seasons of the year, a hat with a narrow brim and laced
5 4| head by the pressure of his hat, gave him the look of an~
6 4| lining of a certain old hat~which Poiret junior (he
7 4| had never seen any other hat on~Poiret's head, dreamed
8 4| sight of that amorphous old hat. Poiret junior left the~
9 4| Suddenly, having taken off his hat, he became aware that the~
10 4| wiped his face, examined the hat, and could find nothing,
11 4| journal:--~ ~"Carried my hat to the Sieur Tournan, hat-maker
12 4| or formerly done,~to my hat."~ ~Monsieur Tournan at
13 4| the office with another hat, lent~by Monsieur Tournan
14 4| It is asserted that my hat contained lard,~the fat
15 4| opposition newspaper, wore a gray hat with a broad~brim, red bands
16 5| who had hastily stuck a hat on Chazelle's chair when
17 5| Chazelle [entering with his hat on his head, and not seeing
18 5| appointment in your second~hat, I presume" [points to the
19 5| presume" [points to the hat on the chair]. "This is
20 5| seen the elephant, and the~hat too; they are big enough
21 8| Du Bruel [putting his hat on again]. "Good-bye." [
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