Part,  Chapter

 1      I,     III|       as children are who have slept well. "I have slept splendidly.
 2      I,     III|       have slept well. "I have slept splendidly. This bed is
 3      I,     III|      exclaimed the child. "She slept with me last night, and
 4     II,      II|       shoots of the reeds, and slept in the mire. The nameless
 5    III,       I|     some one she called Ludwig slept every night on the lounge,
 6    III,       I|      one there.~ ~Ludwig never slept more than four hours of
 7    III,       I| slightest noise. Then, too, he slept like a soldier in the field -
 8    III,      II|    table every night while she slept. To-day Marie did not amuse
 9    III,     III|        morning. If any one had slept on the lounge, the rose-leaf
10     IV,     III|       From that time the count slept more frequently in his observatory
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