Chapter

 1    II|          genial matinée, a horse race, an orgie, an elopement,
 2   III|          gentry might survey the race from their carriages in
 3   III|         to be the signal for the race to begin - when far away
 4   III|      remember that at the second race."~ ~"Really, now," cried
 5   III| unaltered to the very end of the race, though the Whitsun King
 6   III|  majority. Many proposed a fresh race.~ ~"I am ready for anything
 7   III|         was constrained to run a race with the swiftest of steeds.
 8   III|          in common with the bear race, that he never hurt any
 9   VII|          of the nobler masculine race who had remained behind,
10  XIII|        going to take part in the race? Pray do not!"~ ~"Why not?
11  XIII|    extirpation against his whole race was on foot, so he resolved
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