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1 I | of the morning, fixed for eight o'clock, was seldom known~
2 I | was~not uncommon to see eight persons on the two seats
3 I | the Touchards. It was past eight~o'clock. Under the enormous
4 I | It is a quarter-past eight, and I don't see any travellers,"
5 II | for.~ ~During the first eight years of his stewardship,
6 IV | a man in~business these eight years, and the father of
7 IV | Well, you have only eight hundred now to get," remarked
8 V | looking at Colonel Georges. "Eight~francs for Alicante and
9 V | and~works from three to eight o'clock; after eight he
10 V | to eight o'clock; after eight he takes his remedies,~--
11 VI | Excellency has ordered dinner for eight, and wants it served at
12 VII | friend,~ ~Moreau~ ~ ~At eight o'clock that evening, Madame
13 VII | scholarship, between seven and eight hundred francs a year. Now
14 VIII| wholly. He had a salary of eight hundred francs with board
15 IX | dessert~did not appear till eight o'clock,--each course having
16 IX | Georges, who had~just passed eight times at ecarte.~ ~"Nathan
17 X | lay it before Desroches by eight o'clock.~ ~Meantime Desroches,
18 X | earns, himself, a salary of eight~hundred francs. If we have
19 XI | button-hole, was~standing, at eight o'clock, one morning in
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