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| Alphabetical [« »] footmen 1 footpaths 1 footprint 7 footprints 40 footsteps 4 footways 2 foppishly 1 | Frequency [« »] 40 because 40 both 40 far 40 footprints 40 hotel 40 opinion 40 poor | Émile Gaboriau Monsieur Lecoq IntraText - Concordances footprints |
Chapter
1 II | dark stains of numerous footprints presented themselves. Without 2 III | doing so, you’ll damage any footprints.”~His companion swore a 3 III | began an examination of the footprints round about the door that 4 III | difficult to follow the footprints in the open air by the uncertain 5 III | steps and the shape of the footprints.~The difference in the tracks 6 III | went to examine some other footprints a short distance from these; 7 III | toward this gate that these footprints in the snow led the two 8 III | demonstrated. Study the man’s footprints, and you, who are very sharp, 9 III | garden and followed the footprints which led them toward the 10 III | distinct it was. Four series of footprints, very unlike in character, 11 III | his foot exactly on the footprints left by the two women, half 12 III | evidently wiped, all the various footprints came together, mingling 13 III | anxieties. What do these footprints say to you, Papa Absinthe? 14 III | dragged her along; their footprints here are mingled confusedly; 15 III | for you will see that the footprints made by the woman with the 16 III | hurried off to examine these footprints which he had not known how 17 III | there; he saw the confused footprints, the circle made by the 18 IV | are going to follow the footprints of these two women, and 19 IV | play to follow the distinct footprints that led toward the Seine. 20 IV | so to speak; and strange footprints mingled constantly with 21 IV | mingled constantly with the footprints of the fugitives, at times 22 IV | du Chevaleret. Here the footprints abruptly ceased. Lecoq discovered 23 IV | vehicle, and that is why the footprints go no further.”~This explanation 24 IV | that we have seen these footprints, he will ask, where? And 25 IV | gods that we have seen the footprints of a man and of two women, 26 IV | and easily recognizable footprints will prove the culprits’ 27 IV | pour melted lead upon the footprints to fix them.”~They continued 28 IV | and most distinct of the footprints, knelt beside it, and began 29 IV | to cover a number of the footprints with the boxes and pieces 30 V | the experiment with the footprints had died away, and he had 31 V | models of the different footprints in the garden, and the Widow 32 VI | magistrate, “these women whose footprints have been detected must 33 VII | While we were tracking his footprints he was watching us. When 34 VIII| had left the large, broad footprints behind her. And not merely 35 IX | his comrade examining the footprints, and accordingly the presence 36 XII | his desk the molds of the footprints prepared by Lecoq, and showing 37 XII | grenadiers; now, just look at the footprints made by these female giants. 38 XII | faltered by a dying man; a few footprints on some melting snow; a 39 XV | accomplice—the man whose footprints we discovered—the pretended 40 XVII| Papillon.~Remembering the small footprints left in the snow by the