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1 I | seat already booked and paid for by some "bird of passage"
2 I | master of the establishment paid the tax which was levied
3 I | that their taxes were duly paid. All things have~their salad
4 I | thousand francs~already paid to the coach-builder, not
5 III | game. The steward always paid the carriage and Pierrotin'
6 III | the fact that~the Claparts paid a rent of two hundred and
7 III | smaller washing herself,~and paid the postage on her letters
8 III | passengers."~ ~"I haven't paid; I'll get out," said Georges,
9 IV | posed as a great personage; paid for their cheese-cakes,
10 IV | count. "If~the civil list paid you, as it did, thirty thousand
11 IV | And all the places paid for!" said Mistigris, slyly.~ ~"
12 IV | new coach on which I have paid an advance of~two thousand
13 IV | in order to marry Zena, paid three hundred thousand~francs
14 VI | of late years~Moreau had paid his butcher with pigs from
15 VI | being sent for?"~ ~Rosalie paid no heed to the rebuke, but
16 VII | carriages, and otherwise paid attention to those women
17 VIII| of costs and charges be paid in a trice! May our masters
18 IX | packed him~into a coach, paid his fare, and gave the address
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