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1 I | might some~day retire and leave to him alone the transportation
2 III | the~widow, being forced to leave France. Madame Husson, then
3 III | she loved him too well~to leave him so quickly. Not only
4 IV | replied the latter. "I never leave home without taking my~cup
5 IV | take all a man has, and leave him the~rest. The pacha
6 IV | take all the harvests,~and leave the fellahs just enough
7 IV | Diafoirus, 'never does he leave his wife,~never for a second.' '
8 IV | old portress, who didn't leave us any~more than our shadow;
9 IV | make him sleep soundly and leave her free~for a little walk
10 V | He has just told me to leave him on the road near~there;
11 V | Pierrotin," said Oscar, "leave my things at the steward'
12 VI | Pierrotin, though it did not leave Paris till mid-day. She
13 VI | be too happy, I know, to~leave you a souvenir of our stay
14 VI | however, and was forced~to leave him in the salon without
15 VI | silent for some moments.~ ~"I leave you what you have gained,"
16 VI | to be a notary does not leave~important deeds in a diligence
17 VI | Moulineaux, was about to leave the salon for the~dining-room
18 VII | remember, I have none to leave you."~ ~Camusot, in whom
19 VII | of four great families. Leave us, Oscar; go and look~at
20 VII | a notary. But he mustn't leave the track; he must go straight~
21 VIII| overcome. He~was not allowed to leave a single section of the
22 IX | years ago. Yes, I had to leave Crottat and go to Hannequin~
23 IX | for acts of dishonesty, to leave the office in 1788.~ ~Georges
24 IX | close his eyes; he meant to leave her a hundred thousand francs.~
25 IX | hope to acquire in order to leave it. Wiser then~Georges,
26 IX | engagement; I shall have to leave after the~dessert. But,
27 IX | Vandernesse, and I don't~want to leave that sum of money in my
28 X | Oscar's sole ambition was to leave the Guards and be appointed
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