Part,  Chapter

1     I,      IV| Eastern Railway Station at seven o'clock in the morning.
2     I,       X|   cheeks. "That is for the seven wounds I received at Nagy
3     I,       X|    eyes, he moved away.~ ~"Seven children the poor fellow
4     I,       X| the old gentleman with the seven scars and as many children.~ ~
5    II,     VII|  swell out of their number seven white gloves, as did their
6    II,      XI|  but to me it seemed as if seven hard winters and seven fierce
7    II,      XI|  if seven hard winters and seven fierce tropical summers
8    II,     XVI|    I do with the rest, the seven million eight hundred thousand
9    II,    XVII|       Madame, to-day it is seven months since that eventful
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