Part, Chapter
1 I,I | and dines with us every Sunday? Is it~good old Ragon, our
2 I,II | forced to keep house of a Sunday,~opened a conversation with
3 I,II | followed by the theatre, Sunday jaunts to the~country in
4 I,II | house. On the following day, Sunday, they~received their friends.
5 I,II | When he dressed~for the Sunday evening festivities he put
6 I,III| customers of ours. I pray every Sunday for her and for all~her
7 I,III| had~changed on the first Sunday when he saw, at Birotteau'
8 I,V | Adieu; come and dine on Sunday with the Ragons,~Roguin,
9 I,V | twenty-first of January."~ ~"On Sunday, then," said Pillerault
10 I,V | a ball, three weeks from Sunday;~pray come to it, monsieur.
11 I,VI | forthcoming event.~ ~On Sunday, the day Cesar had appointed
12 I,VI | naturally empty and echoing of~a Sunday, when the workpeople were
13 I,VII| presence of workmen on a Sunday in the house of a man so
14 I,VII| be ready for the famous Sunday of December the 17th,~an
15 I,VII| But,~anyhow, after that Sunday," she added naively, "there
16 I,VII| mounting guard, goes on Sunday to its own country-house,
17 I,II | all night, and working all Sunday at the~manufactory--had
18 I,III| persons here came in.~ ~"On Sunday we dine at your aunt Ragon'
19 I,III| little Popinot.~ ~*****~ ~The Sunday dinner at the Ragon's was
20 I,IV | with whom he dined every Sunday, and whom~he has known for
21 I,VII| prepared for it. The last~Sunday of that month was the anniversary
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