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1 II | more than once, when his two elder girls were married,~
2 II | and fortune awaiting her two eldest~girls, she yielded
3 II | three sisters-in-law and the two brothers-in-~law found the
4 II | than ever after~dismissing two or three suitors, she rushed
5 II | marriage such as those of her two sisters, and nevertheless~
6 III | snuff, cleared his throat two or~three times, as if he
7 III | Your brothers~and your two sisters are richly and happily
8 III | dark, it is true.--~If the two gentlemen could agree to
9 III | certainly exist for at least two centuries.~ ~"Pending such
10 IV | amusement than those of two or three places of the same
11 IV | eye-glass on persons not two yards away, and making her~
12 V | know what that means. We~two will keep our secret, and
13 V | cigar? Why, in my time, no two young men could be intimate
14 VI | Then came some anxiety. Two of Monsieur Longueville'
15 VI | who kept an eye on the two young people as a~naturalist
16 VII | disposed~of them at once by two or three of those reflections
17 VII | dear Emilie, in~less than two months perhaps, I may be
18 VII | the fashion,~went out with two of her sisters-in-law, on
19 VII | escaped the ears of her two sisters-in-~law. When, after
20 VIII| to themselves. At about two in the morning, refreshments
21 VIII| who made her his idol.~ ~Two years after her marriage,
22 Add | Daughter of Eve~ Letters of Two Brides~ ~Fontaine, Comte
23 Add | Provincial at Paris~ Letters of Two Brides~ Modest Mignon~ The
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