Chapter
1 I | every one accepted it.~“Dinner is ready,” said the maid.
2 I | minutes later they were at dinner in the little dining-room
3 I | thank you. I have just had dinner.”~“A cup of tea, then?”~“
4 I | took you back again after dinner. Why, the very day when
5 II | with him for an hour after dinner, for he liked Marowsko’s
6 III| or two every day before dinner; I add a little pitching
7 III| was at once perceptible.~Dinner was announced, and as the
8 III| giving the history of a dinner he had eaten at San Domingo
9 III| his account of another dinner, given by a friend of his
10 III| head and went on with his dinner.~He was not hungry and found
11 IV | his brother and himself at dinner.~He was waited on by two
12 V | evening.”~“Will you return to dinner?”~“I do not know. At any
13 V | hesitated about going down to dinner. He was too wretched. His
14 V | hope Jean will have us to dinner in style now. Hang it all!
15 V | woman, as you have done your dinner. I should like to see it
16 VI | apartments, and only came home to dinner and to sleep every night
17 VI | reserve an appetite for dinner, which had been ordered
18 VI | sleeping; and then came a long dinner washed down with many kinds
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