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1 I | celebrated as the cradle~of the family, now extinct, of Isle-Adam,
2 I | already the father of a~family. Released from the cavalry
3 I | a perfect Versailles, a family estate of~which he bears
4 II | under Francois I.~ ~This family bears: party per pale or
5 II | the estate from which the family take their title.~ ~The
6 II | scion of an old historical family~proved to be a very active
7 II | even though she came of a family as distinguished as the
8 II | he was the father of a family;~the count really owed him
9 II | Yes, monsieur,--a noble family of Metz, where my husband
10 III | formerly that of a great family, in~the days when the higher
11 IV | years, and the father of a family?--making me run~the risk
12 V | The career to which my~family destine me will spare me,
13 V | added the rapin.~ ~"Your family, young man, destine you
14 V | said Oscar.~ ~"By your family influence?" inquired Georges
15 V | Mistigris.~ ~"It is a great family," replied the count. "Husson
16 VII | housekeeper in some great family, I could support myself
17 VII | should she do now to feed the family, deprived of the benefits~
18 VII | expression to a high sense of~family duty in these words; he
19 VII | their aunt Clapart. The family intercourse was~restricted
20 VII | no claims on the~Cardot family. But Madame Clapart, like
21 VIII| judiciously inserted into the family soup-pot with a care that
22 X | simultaneously making the family broth, Clapart's~"tisane,"
23 XI | Husson, in whom the Camusot family~now recognize a relation.~ ~
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