Chapter
1 I | women—all women, poor weak things.~Never till his sons came
2 I | then all manner of queer things, winking eclipses which
3 II | people he might see and the things they might say to him.~And
4 II | had gone through terrible things out there, and who had come
5 III | paths. They were fair little things with long hair, and they
6 III | my coffee, and that keeps things lively for the rest of the
7 III | is, I have done all these things, sir, in every quarter of
8 IV | And he talked, putting things in a witty way, and making
9 V | lamented together over the same things, just as if the same blood
10 V | could first distinguish things, that smile, that voice—
11 V | consideration to avoid buying things that do not match. The furniture
12 VI | you should never do two things at once.”~He replied: “I
13 VII | eyes inevitably stamp on things which need the utmost tact,
14 VIII| was thinking of so many things.”~And she thought for a
15 VIII| they discussed a number of things which had to be thought
16 IX | age this is the end of all things. It is wrong. You are forsaking
17 IX | You will want a heap of things to take with you. I have
18 IX | there nothing else you need—things which I, perhaps, know nothing
19 IX | like me to help you to put things to rights on board?”~“No,
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