Chap.

1        1|       were observable the worthy countenance of Caroline’s mother and
2        1|      Fauchery, to put him out of countenance:~“Well, well! What’s your
3        1|          so sharply that he lost countenance and stammered out:~“Two
4        4|         Vandeuvres, whose subtle countenance was darkening visibly, insisted
5        4| decoration and a serious cast of countenance had certainly given a recitation
6        5|         order to keep himself in countenance and offered at the same
7        9|         order to keep himself in countenance Muffat had just picked out
8       11|      deeply furrowed, hard, dead countenance, he looked like an old shriveled
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