Chapter
1 I | Marion, a big country girl, was an indispensable part
2 I | lay to give his boy and girl a good~education; the family
3 I | a lie told without the girl's knowledge or~consent.
4 I | might have been~taken for a girl in disguise, and this so
5 II | s education upon a young girl, whose independent~spirit
6 II | contagious for this high-spirited girl, in whom~they were confirmed
7 II | gone. The high-~spirited girl, with nothing else to do,
8 III | still stood there, poor~girl! in a great tremor of emotion,
9 III | him; Eve was~a penniless girl, and therefore shy. A real
10 IV | the feet of this delicious girl. Eve~had rewarded him beyond
11 V | his arm to this beautiful girl, and~they walked through
12 V | ought not to be a working girl;~and your mother must give
13 V | myself, a penniless working girl with no prospects."~ ~"That
14 VI | beautiful and penniless girl like Eve Chardon, he~would
15 VI | You are going to marry a girl out of L'Houmeau! YOU! a
16 VI | if you are marrying a girl out of L'Houmeau, it must~
17 VI | Yes, if you marry this girl out of L'Houmeau, I shall
18 VI | pigsty, not fit for the girl out of L'Houmeau~to sleep
19 VI | in his company; she is a girl, and acts a~girl's hesitation
20 VI | she is a girl, and acts a~girl's hesitation and manners,
21 VIII| his sake.~ ~"Eve and her girl friends have been working
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