Part, Chapter
1 I,I | will be the kitchen and rooms of the cook and the man-of-~
2 I,IV | walls were less high, the rooms less large, and dared not
3 I,IV | appartement was made up of four rooms, without counting the~precious /
4 I,IV | what would two furnished rooms let for in that~quarter?--
5 I,IV | the transfer of the~two rooms by Monsieur Cayron, here
6 I,V | small appartement of three rooms in the Rue des Bourdonnais
7 I,VI | back-shop,~and two other rooms lighted from the street,
8 I,VI | own workroom. Above these rooms~were three narrow little
9 I,VI | intended to dwell. The three~rooms were dilapidated, and had
10 I,VI | walls of these~horrible rooms, the workman pasting the
11 I,VII| Cesar positively that~the rooms would be ready for the famous
12 I,VII| three men~were lighting the rooms.~ ~"It takes a hundred and
13 I,VII| harmony led through all the rooms and~allied them with one
14 I,VII| dancers.~An hour later the rooms were full, and the ball
15 I,VII| triumphantly,~the four rooms constructed by the architect
16 I,II | he~haunted the editorial rooms; he wormed himself to the
17 I,III| desks were~moved into the rooms above the shop and the back-shop.
18 I,IV | and crossed the sumptuous rooms~which helped to make Madame
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