Chap.

 1        3|      seventeen, she must now be thirtyfour and that since her
 2        3|       twenty, and you’re really thirty.”~Vandeuvres, who was looking
 3        4|       the Gare du Nord; she was thirty–nine years old and had the
 4        4|  general and never owned to her thirtytwo summers. The Russians
 5        4|      from the whole table where thirtyeight human beings were
 6        4|      had already had as many as thirtytwo children that way.~“
 7        4|         two children that way.~“Thirtytwo children at forty!”
 8        5|   Varietes they were giving the thirtyfourth performance of the
 9        5|     palefaced ancient, who for thirty years had been a servant
10        5|          Mme Bron, who had been thirty years in the theater, replied
11        8|      conquered her scruples for thirty sous. And to think a thing
12        8| sidewalk and fish up as many as thirty women in an evening. Satin,
13       11|    forty to one against Hazard, thirty to one against Bourn, thirty–
14       11|    thirty to one against Bourn, thirtyfive to one against Pichenette,
15       11|      quotation: the betting was thirty to one against Nana; it
16       11|   daughter Amelie from Gaga for thirty thousand francs, they said.~“
17       11|        supposing the odds to be thirty to one against, gave him
18       11|   drunken fit. At a distance of thirty paces the brass instruments
19       13|        were due to the modiste, thirty thousand to the linen draper,
20       13|         amount of a hundred and thirtythree francs, and despite
21       13|       borrowing the hundred and thirtythree francs from Zoe; she
22       13|        navy, having saved about thirty thousand francs in his ten
23       14|         and descended more than thirty flights of stairs amid a
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