Chapter
1 I | with a pencil the first four columns, drawing a line
2 I | She counted six thousand four hundred francs and quietly
3 I | uttered a scream of joy. Four large birds carved in oak,
4 I | of flowers and fruit, and four finely fluted columns, terminating
5 III | generally arrived about four o’clock in the afternoon,
6 III | astonished than ever. They all four got into the carriage, and
7 IV | priests, the mayor, and the four farmers invited, alone betrayed
8 V | V~CORSICA AND A NEW LIFE~Four days later the travelling
9 V | were anchored in the dock. Four or five rowboats came up
10 V | delayed their return home four days longer, not being able
11 VI | after each meal he drank four or five glasses of brandy.~
12 VIII| house.~One afternoon, about four o’clock, two persons, a
13 IX | mentioned the rides they all four were going to take together.
14 XI | The principal had received four letters signed by Jeanne
15 XI | thousand francs. He then wrote four letters in six months, giving
16 XI | more than if he had filled four pages with news of her.
17 XII | had found, they would keep four farms situated at St. Leonard,
18 XII | the château. Otherwise, in four years you will not have
19 XIII| the side of the high road.~Four trellised arbors covered
20 XIII| and clematis formed the four corners of the garden, which
21 XIII| farms surrounded by their four double rows of tall trees
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