Part,  Chapter

 1     I,      II|   corner of the room stood a bed, in the middle was a table,
 2     I,      VI| retired, to put her babes to bed, as she said - a duty which
 3     I,      VI| clock to put her children to bed - a duty which she never
 4     I,      VI|    the child, and put him to bed; then he drew the curtains
 5     I,      VI|    aside; the child knelt in bed, folded his little hands,
 6     I,     VII|  could a dying man leave his bed to vote? But my drummers
 7     I,      IX| chest of drawers, and coarse bed with bear-skin coverlet,
 8     I,      XI|    have lain sleepless in my bed and rubbed that eternally
 9    II,     III| tapestry hangings around her bed, and never yet had she tasted
10    II,     VII| milady, the physician at the bed of his patient is of the
11    II,      XV|         Don't move from this bed. You are trifling with your
12    II,     XVI|    had thrown herself on the bed, without undressing, for,
13    II,     XVI|  moment. She sprang from the bed and came to me. "See how
14    II,    XVII|      little James was out of bed, and, barefooted, in his
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