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1 I | to Beaumont-sur-Oise,--a line extremely profitable,~for
2 I | continued, so productive is a line~on which are little towns
3 I | rival coach on the~Daumartin line.~ ~Though the departures
4 I | and across the back, "Line to Isle-Adam."~ ~Our descendants
5 I | Touchards, to magnify his own line, to carry~passengers who
6 I | outstrip his comrade on the line, hoping that the latter
7 II | Serisy descends in a direct line from the famous~president
8 II | evening he~had sent Moreau a line by the diligence to Beaumont,
9 III | black-silk cravat drew a line round his very~white neck,
10 IV | of the Nile. Draw a green~line down a sheet of yellow paper,
11 IV | double-~quick, and cut his line in two,--you understand?
12 VI | kite by a twitch at its line.~ ~"Madame!" cried her maid-servant,
13 VI | keeper's lodge and wrote a line,~folding it in a way impossible
14 VIII| lawyer's office are, in~this line, superior to comedians.~ ~
15 X | examination to pass. In that line, his defects might prove
16 X | of sub-~lieutenant of the line. Oscar Husson was by that
17 X | regiment of the cavalry of the line. In the month of~February,
18 XI | Pierrotin, the master of the line of coaches running through
19 XI | replied the master of the line of coaches of the Valley
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