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1 I | in vain they constructed better coaches and~started oftener.
2 I | them; for there was always~better chance of a seat to be had
3 I | necessity of soon getting~better coaches, and of the duty
4 I | real great lady~couldn't do better than that. And every time
5 I | Twenty good Gods!~hadn't I better find some way of warning
6 III | years older than Oscar, better dressed than he,~without
7 III | prevented her~from being better dressed! One of the young
8 III | theatre, and~then to nothing better than the Ambigu-Comique,
9 III | will balance the carriage~better."~ ~"We sha'n't be off for
10 III | Why didn't you keep better count of us?" said Mistigris. "'
11 IV | father? It wouldn't be funny. Better be a disguised~Russian prince
12 IV | his lips.~ ~"It is all the better," said Georges, "because
13 IV | up wines are a great deal better than the natural ones in
14 IV | Porte. So I~concluded I had better get off while I could. But
15 IV | decorations of yours~any better?" said Schinner, recovering
16 V | endeavoring to smoke with better grace.~ ~But his nausea
17 V | don't know your proverbs~better than that."~ ~"I may not
18 V | deaf: 'discretion plays the better part of adder.'"~ ~"'A poet
19 VI | saying that 'two coats are better than none.'"~ ~"How do you
20 VI | notwithstanding this disloyalty, better than others, as I believe.
21 VI | Well, he looks a great deal better like that."~ ~"Little scamp,"
22 VIII| youth might still get the better of him. Nevertheless, the~
23 VIII| world and its laws, the better his~mind would form itself,
24 IX | sum like that! Hadn't you~better give it to Monsieur Godeschal
25 IX | satisfaction the arrival~of a new better; for all, with the instinct
26 X | shouldn't I have hid him~better if there had been anything
27 X | would say, "Oscar is doing better than I even~hoped. That
28 XI | machine, had served his wife~better by death than by all his
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