Chap.

1        1|      of fabrics, a continual march past of skirts and head
2        1|     the cook’s accounts. The march past of the gods, Neptune,
3        4|     solitary state. Thus the march past could not be organized,
4        5|  clock. In the course of his march Mignon planted himself in
5        7| boulevard. So he went on the march again and determined to
6        7|    began his long, unresting march through the streets, as
7        8|    skirt the church and then march off along the Rue le Peletier.
8       10|     the darkness of the damp March night through which great
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