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1 I | Twenty good Gods! a fine day~like this, and I've only
2 I | that the latter might some~day retire and leave to him
3 I | came to Paris the other day to~settle?"~ ~"I don't know,"
4 I | three or four packages a day,--either from~monsieur or
5 III | really thinking of some day~proposing Oscar to the count
6 III | you may be yourself~some day. 'Travel deforms youth.'
7 IV | slyly.~ ~"It is a lucky day for me," continued Pierrotin; "
8 IV | Mistigris, who~will some day reproduce Hobbema, Ruysdael,
9 IV | and changing linen every day. It~was all the more violently
10 IV | am going back there some~day to paint her portrait; for
11 V | breakfast?"~ ~"Always once a day," said the fat farmer; "
12 V | diplomatist who may some day recover~Belgium for France."~ ~
13 V | will be made a bishop some day," said Oscar.~ ~"By your
14 V | on horseback nearly every day."~ ~"'Aut Caesar, aut Serizy,'"
15 VI | of mere bravado; but this day will oblige me to do~fine
16 VII | a fortune which may some day~make me the equal of his
17 VII | he done to you? If some day we should live at our~ease,
18 VII | man so changed in a~single day."~ ~"Clapart, two glasses
19 VII | surprised to learn that~after a day so filled with events and
20 VII | sleep of the just. The next day he~did not find the world
21 VII | enough to obtain one.~On the day when he was no longer able
22 VII | office; drudge~night and day, and study at home. Become,
23 VIII| unhappy Oscar.~ ~"We work here day and night," said the lawyer,
24 VIII| called out.~ ~Though the day was Sunday, the head-clerk
25 VIII| Holy Ghost, so be it. This~day, the feast of our lady Saincte-Geneviesve,
26 VIII| present~office has this day been put in possession of
27 VIII| Charter of our gullets.~ ~This day, Sunday, June 27th, were
28 VIII| pretended~reception:--~ ~This day, Monday, November 25th,
29 VIII| imposing register.~ ~The day after the arrival of each
30 VIII| the office."~ ~The next day the new clerk found the
31 IX | Cabirolos~The following day, at two o'clock, a young
32 IX | clothes on the following day, impatient enough to~behold,
33 IX | his manner of dress on the day of that journey to Presles,
34 IX | him the perspective of a day of happiness; he was to~
35 X | tete-a-tete of each endless~day. Delighted to turn a sharpened
36 X | Oscar. "I draw my number the day~after to-morrow. Between
37 XI | having chosen this particular day to do the~valley of the
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