Chapter
1 I | bills were scattered on the floor of the carriage. This roused
2 I | in a bridge on the first floor. The huge drawing-room was
3 I | drawing-room was on the ground floor to the right and was hung
4 I | divided the whole first floor, the doors of ten rooms
5 IV | her ball of wool on the floor and her knitting in the
6 VII | haggard, was seated on the floor, her legs stretched out,
7 VII | breaking her neck on the stone floor of the hall. She rushed
8 VII | heard a little noise on the floor, a sort of scratching, a
9 VII | coverlets, jumped to the floor and fell down, her limbs
10 VII | writhed and rolled on the floor. The door opened. Aunt Lison
11 VII | cap awry, her apron on the floor, and her face again covered
12 VII | who had sunk down on the floor, faltered: “The first evening.”~
13 VII | shoulders, raised her from the floor and dragged her to the door,
14 IX | and lifted her from the floor as though she had been a
15 IX | letters were lying on the floor! He would have to open only
16 XI | man, he fell over on the floor with a stroke of apoplexy.~
17 XI | side and her cap on the floor. She might be about forty
18 XIII| the two rooms on the first floor, which she thought of as “
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