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Alphabetical    [«  »]
romantic 2
roof 2
roofs 1
room 60
rooms 4
rooted 2
roots 1
Frequency    [«  »]
61 find
61 long
61 through
60 room
59 back
59 let
59 turned
Émile Gaboriau
Monsieur Lecoq

IntraText - Concordances

room

   Chapter
1 I | shutters was explained. The room presented such a spectacle 2 I | furthest corners of the room. Tables, glasses, decanters, 3 I | extended in the middle of the room. A woman crouched upon the 4 I | leading into an adjoining room, stood a young man, in front 5 I | darted into the adjoining room, hoping doubtless to escape 6 I | traveled slowly round the room, and then in tearful tones 7 II | that Lecoq reentered the room. He could no longer conceal 8 II | sleep.”~Here he stood, in a room that was splashed with blood, 9 III | in the Widow Chupin’s own room, they found a well-trimmed 10 V | when the two men left the room. A candle, with a charred 11 V | one of the corners of the room.~“What is the matter?” asked 12 VI | investigating magistrate entered the room.~All the officials assembled 13 VI | head. The others in the room had no existence so far 14 VII | left, pass by the keeper’s room, and finally enter the registrar’ 15 VII | registrar’s office was a large room heated almost to suffocation 16 VII | lined three sides of the room. These benches, with a couple 17 VIII | In the concierge’s little room he found an old woman knitting. 18 VIII | clothing hung around the room to aid in the identification 19 IX | Lecoq entered M. Segmuller’s room the latter was busy studying 20 IX | the Poivriere entered the room, bowing to the right and 21 IX | boy, I went upstairs to my room, which is just over the 22 X | precipitated himself into the room. Goguet turned pale behind 23 X | reached the centre of the room, he paused and looked around 24 X | cross the threshold of the room where the magistrate awaits 25 XI | standing in the centre of the room, a half-pleased, half-anxious 26 XI | door leading into the back room, with a table before you 27 XII | send my clerk out of the room, on an errand?” He said 28 XII | him to the magistrate’s room conducted him back to the 29 XIII | lamps turned to leave the room, a rap was heard at the 30 XIV | a neat, brightly lighted room, where he found a woman 31 XIV | afternoon. He asked for a cheap room, and I showed him one on 32 XIV | useless.~He hastily left the room, ran to the Place de Roubaix, 33 XIV | up to the missing man’s room, and Lecoq sprang toward 34 XIV | nothing more. He left the room with downcast head; and 35 XV | floor. He had reached his room, and was about to enter, 36 XV | come in?”~They entered the room, and Lecoq lit a candle. 37 XV | shrewd face peered into the room.~“Ah! it is my worthy coachman!” 38 XV | seated in the centre of the room, directly under the skylight, 39 XVI | windows of the long dressing room were shaking and brushing 40 XVI | hour Polyte entered the room. From head to foot, from 41 XVI | the Virtuous entered the room, carrying her child in her 42 XVI | door of the magistrate’s room without previously knocking; 43 XVI | ordered her to leave the room at once. But the poor creature 44 XVI | Toinon to be removed from the room, when he found the door 45 XVI | who had just entered his room, and recapitulated briefly 46 XVI | had been taken from the room, being to all appearances 47 XVI | departed, Lecoq reentered the room. “Ah, sir,” said he, despondently, “ 48 XVI | could say.”~She left the room—or rather she rushed wildly 49 XVIII| he started to leave the room, and Lecoq, this time, had 50 XVIII| governor, hastily leaving the room.~Less than a quarter of 51 XIX | had been confined to his room for a week or so, when one 52 XX | glass door. “In the dark room there, sir. By leaving the 53 XX | word Lecoq darted into the room in question. Not a moment 54 XX | reclaim the money I paid for a room I never occupied.”~“Such 55 XX | francs he paid her for his room. We must do our best, however. 56 XXI | supposed murderer cross the room and seat himself at a table 57 XXI | To enter Monseigneur’s room,” replied the Suisse, “in 58 XXII | exclaimed: “This is the room; you gentlemen can enter 59 XXIV | confined himself to his room for a couple of months to 60 XXIV | conducted to the magistrate’s room for examination, it was


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