Chapter
1 I | time of my return to Paris four years ago.”~“But you look
2 I | and carpeted in red, with four chairs upholstered in the
3 II | evening at the Louvre for four francs fifty, his trousers
4 II | glasses, of which he had four. Nothing was said during
5 III | into a large room in which four men were writing at a table.
6 IV | interview those people?”~“At four o’clock.”~“Take Duroy, who
7 IV | took him to the offices of four or five rival papers, hoping
8 V | which the table was laid for four; that table looked very
9 V | working at the office. At four o’clock he received a telegram
10 V | twenty francs until only four francs twenty remained.
11 VI | a small boudoir in which four ladies were gathered around
12 VII | a carriage standing and four gentlemen stamping their
13 VIII | arrived the following day at four o’clock in the afternoon.
14 XII | me and come to-morrow at four o’clock to Park Monceau.”~
15 XIII | had nothing to do until four o’clock, at which hour he
16 XIII | it. Clotilde is coming at four, I must get rid of the other
17 XIII | separated.~Du Roy returned at four o’clock to await his mistress.
18 XIV | hundred francs; that makes four thousand, and I will pay
19 XV | basin, on the edges of which four large swans of delftware
20 XVII | six-seated carriage drawn by four horses. They were going
21 XVIII| dignity. Behind them came four maids of honor dressed in
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