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1 I | cried Pierrotin.~ ~"Have you really got it?" asked the man,
2 II | father of a family;~the count really owed him that sum as a gift
3 III | finding out whether he were really going there.~ ~"Yes," said
4 III | was fit for. Moreau was really thinking of some day~proposing
5 III | And so, my friend, you are really going to trust your future
6 IV | of that~cursed pirate was really the cause of all my Zena'
7 IV | vengeance!"~ ~"Did all that really happen to you?" said Oscar,
8 V | inn-keeper, "the farm is really worth that to~him."~ ~"Yes;
9 V | eighteen years. Therefore it is really an investment at more than
10 V | the East and Spain can't really admire it."~ ~"I've two
11 V | hearing this statement.~ ~"Really," said the count to Oscar, "
12 V | companions to know that he was really going to the chateau.~ ~"
13 V | way to the~forest; if you really want to get to the chateau,
14 VI | trifles in Paris, but are really~of immense importance in
15 VI | eyes of the peasants, was really a personage.~ ~Estelle (
16 VI | with a stern air which was really~terrible, "what would you
17 VI | to whom does Mistigris really~belong?"~ ~"To my friend
18 VII | though his~preferences were really for Piron, Vade, and Colle.
19 VII | brilliant fortune; for,~really and truly, you were burying
20 VIII| hoax or a practical joke is really~marvellous. The denizens
21 IX | that the marquise might really~be the widow of a Spanish
22 X | had passed the night.~ ~"Really, my little Florentine,"
23 X | said her husband. "Do you really believe in that marquise?~
24 X | to that dear boy. You are really too unjust--"~ ~"You call
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