Chapter
1 I | you like a stroll for an hour?”~“Certainly.”~They turned
2 III | going out.~“You here—at this hour! Can I do anything for you?”~
3 III | Duroy hesitated: “At this hour I cannot inquire for her.”~“
4 III | When the clock chimed the hour of his appointment, he climbed
5 IV | him. After trying for an hour, and after filling five
6 IV | anger spurring him on. In an hour he had finished an article,
7 V | to spend a quarter of an hour with you.” When the mother
8 V | and kissed her hair. An hour and a half later he escorted
9 V | whispered: “Tuesday, at the same hour.”~She repeated his words,
10 V | Here is the money for your hour. Take that rascal to Rue
11 VII | convenient. I often have an hour early in the morning when
12 VIII| some food. He returned an hour later; Mme. Forestier would
13 VIII| the platform awaiting the hour of departure and conversing
14 IX | were so many ships!”~An hour later they departed in order
15 X | you thinking? For half an hour you have not uttered a word.”~
16 XI | When Du Roy returned an hour later, no one called him
17 XI | matters not where—at any hour you wish—provided that I
18 XII | o’clock: he was half an hour too early. He laughed as
19 XII | arrived at the appointed hour the following day. The benches
20 XIII| Du Roys; he came at any hour, bringing dispatches or
21 XIII| until four o’clock, at which hour he was to meet Mme. de Marelle
22 XV | can meet here again in an hour.”~The two young people disappeared
23 XV | the decoration itself.~An hour after having read that notice,
24 XVI | to do in this place.”~An hour later Georges du Roy entered
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