Part, Chapter
1 I,I | will have to make a~pretty number of /neuvaines/ for the success
2 I,II | prudence suggested by the number of her swains, wholesale
3 I,IV | over a greater or lesser number of victims,~--over wife,
4 I,IV | of Paris in an infinite number of petty questions as to~
5 I,IV | bandboxes, on a bracket a number of his deceased~canaries
6 I,IV | There swarm an infinite number of heterogeneous~and mixed
7 I,IV | and gauze, and above all a number~of petty trades, of which
8 I,VII| and there was a goodly number of~people whose invitations
9 I,VII| fairly frightened at the number of friends whom they~did
10 I,VII| son, the mayor. Put the number of the guests after their~
11 I,VII| supported by columns were a number of~mantel ornaments chosen
12 I,I | common among the greater number of the petty Parisian~tradesmen,
13 I,III| bottle of claret, and a number of dainty dishes which only~
14 I,V | who belonged to~the small number of true gentlemen whom the
15 I,VI | creditors who make up in number and~amount the majority
16 I,VI | certain affairs with a certain number of creditors whose interest,~
17 I,VI | commercial courts are~few in number; it therefore happened that
18 I,VI | turned on increasing the number of persons among whom~the
19 I,VII| Cesar finished dressing, a number of~his faithful friends
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