Part, Chapter
1 I, I | dreamy, however, after his breakfast and his cigarette; he pondered
2 I, I | was very simply invited to breakfast on the following Monday.~
3 I, III| when shall you invite us to breakfast with the Duchess?”~“Name
4 I, III| mantles,” often received at breakfast or at dinner the beautiful
5 I, III| agreeable anticipation of his breakfast the next morning.~The table
6 I, III| a plan whereby she might breakfast with him, in some suburb
7 II, I | models, I decide to go and~breakfast somewhere, for I no longer
8 II, II | opposite each other, for breakfast, in the large dining-room
9 II, II | will take a long walk after breakfast,” said the Countess. “We
10 II, II | said the Countess, “come to breakfast, my child.”~But the young
11 II, II | just now.”~“Yes, but my breakfast has made me feel ill.”~“
12 II, II | stream until the hour for breakfast.~She sat down at the table
13 II, II | rang the first signal for breakfast, it seemed to her that someone
14 II, III| prescribed beer for her breakfast, at its headquarters, in
15 II, V | often invited the Marquis to breakfast. He would arrive, spreading
16 II, V | Marquis, and Annette, after a breakfast at his own house. The Countess
17 II, V | an hour or two.~“I will breakfast here,” said he, as he entered,
18 II, V | disturbing deshabille worn at breakfast with intimate friends, which
19 II, VI | I used to do—pretend to breakfast here at noon, and then go
20 II, VI | noon, and then go and have breakfast with you at a quarter past
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