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1 I | diligence he had~been to see the evening before at the painter's;
2 II | had adopted. The preceding evening he~had sent Moreau a line
3 II | count, who intended in the evening to drive~to Presles openly
4 IV | trades are accessory. In the evening,~linen changed, I sat in
5 VI | mayor of~Presles came every evening to play cards with them.
6 VI | seeing the two artists in~evening dress.~ ~"Oh! so you have
7 VI | coming here to dinner this evening. Now,~monsieur, I could
8 VI | personages saw the count in evening dress, and~wearing his orders,
9 VII | At eight o'clock that evening, Madame Clapart, just returned
10 VII | allow himself to spend an evening at a cafe. In spite of the~
11 VII | the shame of the preceding evening, unhappily~too transient,
12 VIII| and to~some theatre in the evening. Oscar had been so snubbed
13 VIII| installation, on a winter evening when the~work had been got
14 VIII| to half-past seven in~the evening. Coffee, ices, and liqueurs
15 VIII| the performance of this evening, it is proper to make this~
16 IX | ll take you to~spend the evening with Madame la Marquise
17 IX | to have been served last evening, and Oscar,~instead of doing
18 IX | trick against us for this evening. As for me, I can't go to
19 IX | boulevards, considering the fine evening, to~the house of the Marquise
20 X | sensible; you danced last evening in 'Les Ruines,'~and you
21 X | de Cancale and spend the evening with a~marquise--"~ ~"Don'
22 XI | must have taken them last evening."~ ~"Ah! monsieur is the
23 XI | hour of the morning in an~evening coat, instead of a surtout;
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