Chapter
1 II | every noble soul. And these three forms~of poetry ascend to
2 II | round the wall, and two or three chairs, also of wood,~were
3 IV | knowledge and capital--these three points~mark out a social
4 IV | thrift in the Dutch. For three~centuries it swayed the
5 IV | the Palais Royal. Two or~three kept up the traditions of
6 IV | grandsires; but something of all three they meant to be~without
7 V | superficial as before. Two or three men were~completely deceived,
8 VII | religious phase lasted for three months. At the end of that~
9 VII | every afternoon between three and five. They,~too, are
10 VIII| little of a rake, he wins in three moves. Now, if I undertook
11 VIII| regard to each~other met three times in society during
12 VIII| brighter, and she fancied that three~masked figures suddenly
13 IX | time she distinctly~saw the three masked figures.~ ~"Armand,"
14 IX | said some word, and his three friends vanished.~ ~The
15 IX | of the rich!~ ~More than three weeks went by. Mme de Langeais
16 IX | clock in the morning till three in the afternoon. ~Armand
17 IX | stop to the scandal.~ ~At three o'clock, therefore, M. le
18 X | alone with Antoinette. Ail three of you come and dine~with
19 X | the pleasure to go."~ ~The three gentlemen probably guessed
20 X | must come to see me. If, three hours~afterwards, by eight
21 X | do not come to me within three hours, to be~henceforth
22 X | shudder of the woman who, in three~hours' time, will live only
23 X | cannot travel faster than three~leagues an hour, and tomorrow
24 X | bars were sawn through. Three men stood on~guard outside,
25 X | behind him. The~clock struck three just as the two men reached
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