Part,  Chapter

 1     I,      II|    is another, a long-legged Englishman, standing with watch in
 2     I,     III|                   III.~ ~THE ENGLISHMAN.~ ~That long-legged son
 3     I,     III|     him at all; but when the Englishman showed him a handful of
 4     I,     III|          Tell him," said the Englishman, "to run to the next railway
 5     I,     III|         All right," said the Englishman, "I will take care of them.
 6     I,     III|      will blow it," said the Englishman, with admirable patience,
 7     I,     III| which I had quitted when the Englishman came up to me. It was a
 8     I,     III|   the relief train. Once the Englishman blew the horn for the goats,
 9     I,     III|       and found my practical Englishman beside the child, but incapable
10     I,     III|  know him?"~ ~"Oh!" said the Englishman, as he heard the name, "
11     I,     III| understood every word of the Englishman's. In this case he could
12     I,     III|       said I, turning to the Englishman. "Ours is not a language
13     I,       V|     I spoke of the practical Englishman and his performances, and
14    II,     XII|    treated were foes; one an Englishman, the other a German from
15    II,     XII|    and one of the three, the Englishman, falls shot in the abdomen.
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