Chapter

 1   III|      in a whisper to her bosom friends that she had good cause
 2   III|      and a few of my gentlemen friends sat down to play together.
 3    IV|       with him, they and these friends of theirs did not even exchange
 4    VI|   which if our feather-brained friends had their way might even
 5   VII|    your honour's affairs? Make friends with him again, by all means!
 6   VII|     the congratulations of his friends that restored him to his
 7   VII|     henceforth we will be good friends and kinsmen, and I shall
 8   VII|     conscience.~ ~"Look ye, my friends!" he cried, turning at last
 9   VII|    fourth day, of all his good friends, officials, domestics, and
10  VIII|    away.~ ~What would her good friends and kinsfolk Boltay and
11  VIII|       no tender regard for thy friends or thy relations which leads
12    IX|    would ask you all three, my friends, to grant me a few hours'
13    IX| appearance by Abellino and his friends. They naturally sent out
14    IX|     therefore advised by their friends to go home, and settle their
15     X|      them. They were now to be friends, firm friends.~ ~Only with
16     X|        now to be friends, firm friends.~ ~Only with the greatest
17     X|    well! young women soon make friends with each other. I am so
18    XI|       world, and readily makes friends. Kiss her hand, and call
19  XIII|   gentlemen their caps, to the friends they had left behind on
20    XV|        door. "These privileged friends of mine are vastly impertinent,"
21   XVI|    they had been the very best friends in the world. And here we
22   XVI|     face was equivalent, among friends, to at least three boxes
23   XXI|        He knew why.~ ~"My dear friends and good neighbours," began
24   XXI|        kinsmen to remember. My friends I can easily count up. I
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