Chap.

 1        1|          distance did the string of carriages extend.~“What a moving mass!
 2        2|          man of whom she jobbed her carriages. He had settled himself
 3        5|     boulevards the roll of the last carriages deafened him with the name
 4        6|            kilometers distant. Five carriages would come out from Orleans,
 5        6|           whips. Then suddenly five carriages came into view, driving
 6        6|           it was too late. The five carriages which were taking Nana and
 7        6|           past! The laughter in the carriages had ceased, and faces were
 8        6|           Georges is with her!”~The carriages had passed quite through
 9        6|            in the evening. The five carriages were rolling through a flat
10        6| exclamations burst from the line of carriages and were borne down the
11        6|             were of no account.~The carriages had pulled up abruptly,
12        6|         tour of the place while the carriages would go and await them
13        7|          deal since the autumn. The carriages in the roadway were rolling
14        8|           of dignified gentlemen in carriages and assure them that their
15        9|            piercingly. The sound of carriages in the boulevard and neighboring
16        9|            earth. I should give you carriages and diamonds and dresses!”~
17        9|           Villiers.”~“And there are carriages there?”~“Yes.”~“Lace? Diamonds?”~“
18       10|            in the stables, and five carriages in the coach houses, and
19       11|       eleven oclock, just when the carriages were reaching the Longchamps
20       11|             filling with a crowd of carriages, horsemen and pedestrians,
21       11|           the field was filling up. Carriages, a compact, interminable
22       11|           in a scared way among the carriages. On the green the far–off
23       11|           other side of the course.~Carriages were still arriving. They
24       11|           horses. Beyond them other carriages stood about in comparative
25       11|       bookmakers, who stood in open carriages gesticulating like itinerant
26       11|           the middle of the mass of carriages now hemming in her landau,
27       11|        Tricon amid the thick of the carriages. Having arrived in a cab,
28       11|             drinking booths. In the carriages the women did their best
29       11|            round her in the ladiescarriages they were whispering that
30       11|           tiptoe, others perched on carriages, and all heaving and jostling
31       11|         motionless files of waiting carriages; and in the direction of
32       11|          Prix Vaublanc was run for. Carriages began driving off one by
33       12|             dull roll of occasional carriages in the Avenue de Villiers.
34       14|          his horses amid a block of carriages and people on foot. During
35       14|          Madeleine to the Bastille. Carriages rolled slowly along. A roaring
36       14|            a confused procession of carriages. Everywhere there were vast
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