Chap.

 1        4|    affairs—about a dispute with a coachman, a projected picnic and
 2        6|            Directly afterward the coachman said just the opposite.
 3        6|           taken possession of the coachman, a little taciturn old man
 4       10|           sufficient. A butler, a coachman, a porter and a cook were
 5       10|            Charles, a great, tall coachman, who had been in service
 6       10|      Charles!” she shouted to the coachman and began calling: “Satin,
 7       10|          the street smiled at the coachman’s loftily dignified demeanor.~
 8       11|          Furious, as became an excoachman of the count’s, and brutally
 9       13|       were dying of laughter. The coachman was staring across from
10       13|       very nice with Charles, the coachman. When she stopped at a restaurant
11       13|        separate them and give the coachman the sack. This was the beginning
12       13|           two minutes to tell the coachman to put the horses to, while
13       14|       story!”~Lucy had bidden her coachman drive fast, and while the
14       14| destination. On the boulevard the coachman had had to rein in his horses
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