Part,  Chapter

 1     I,       V|      had sat with the boy in a common carriage with other decent
 2     I,     VII| national cockade we sported in common.~ ~At six o'clock p.m. the
 3     I,     VII|  village? The name is rather a common one."~ ~"There is indeed,
 4     I,       X|   energetic co-operation for a common purpose, the welfare of
 5     I,      XI|  interest on the sum even to a common usurer. I had some faint
 6     I,     XII|    better than their victim. A common criminal, murderer, counterfeiter,
 7    II,       I|   unusual upon the finger of a common gardener, had caught the
 8    II,       I|     present resemblance to our common progenitors, the Simians -
 9    II,       I|      seems you have secrets in common already."~ ~I opened my
10    II,      II|      but all had possessed one common peculiarity which betrayed
11    II,      IV|       showed him was more than common courtesy, and more than
12    II,       V|      or any other low place of common entertainment.~ ~"I have,"
13    II,     VII|   particle of good judgment or common sense, I should have taken
14    II,      IX| hysterically, that their dear, common friend, Dr. Dumany, had
15    II,       X|        of anything that is not common to both alike. What is mine
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