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1 III| connecting rooms, a dining-room, salon, and bedroom. Above it~was
2 III| Later, when he entered the salon, he~noticed some old Empire
3 III| judged of the~bedroom by the salon and dining-room. The wood-work,
4 VI | the~ground-floor a fine salon opening into a bedroom,
5 VI | the chamber adjoining the salon~into a boudoir. These two
6 VI | furniture of the chateau. The salon,~hung with blue and white
7 VI | that of sitting idly in her salon awaiting~the coach from
8 VI | rather have them in the salon; but perhaps I am indiscreet
9 VI | returning to the door of the salon, "his~Excellency has ordered
10 VI | much discomfited, to the salon.~ ~"I am sure I do not know,"
11 VI | coming to the door of the salon. "And he begs~Monsieur Schinner
12 VI | forced~to leave him in the salon without an answer, for Rosalie
13 VI | count's orders, into the salon, where he found his clerk,
14 VI | pointing to the ceiling of the salon.~ ~"Monseigneur," replied
15 VI | house. There he entered the salon and sat~down without noticing
16 VI | rigid as a pole, into the~salon, at the very feet of the
17 VI | was about to leave the salon for the~dining-room with
18 IX | witness of that scene in the salon at Presles when Moreau had
19 IX | clock, Oscar entered the salon of the~Rocher de Cancale,--
20 IX | introduced them into~Florentine's salon. There sparkled a bevy of
21 IX | the~bed-chamber. In the salon, the women were playing
22 IX | Florentine, returning to the salon to receive the adieux of
23 X | spectre at~the door of the salon whither his curiosity had
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