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1 I | Pierrotin.~ ~"Have you really got it?" asked the man, laughing,
2 III | follow his~advice."~ ~As he got into the coach, Oscar's
3 III | other.~ ~"We seem to have got here too early," pursued
4 III | shaking hands with his friend, got into the coach,~handling
5 III | name. When the count, as he got into the carriage, cast
6 IV | I~should certainly have got myself arrested; so off
7 IV | five-franc piece. But~faith! I got no compensation for the
8 IV | crushing it, as he meant to do,~got crushed himself. His son
9 IV | place. All the travellers got out. Puzzled by the apparent
10 IV | and what-not. But when we got back to his capital he~made
11 IV | However, the Alicante had got into his head, and his vanity
12 IV | morality of courts where you got those decorations of yours~
13 IV | tom-fool, Lord Byron, who~got you into the scrape. Oh!
14 IV | as you could never have got through the doorway," replied~
15 V | champagne."~ ~"I can't. I've got a fish I must deliver by
16 V | addressing Georges when he got back into the coach.~ ~The
17 VII | bed~the instant that he got the order.~ ~Those who remember
18 VII | That Monsieur Moreau who got him the scholarship will
19 VIII| evening when the~work had been got through more quickly than
20 IX | I should think so! We got into a scrape together,"
21 XI | cried: "Start!" Pierrotin got up beside his driver, a
22 XI | But no sooner had it got above Saint-Laurent than
23 XI | where all the~passengers got out while the coach changed
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