Chapter
1 1 | beast was worth at least twenty livres; and the words which
2 1 | window, was a woman of from twenty to two-and-twenty years.
3 1 | risked more if he had said twenty thousand; but a certain
4 2 | Bassompierre had been talked of twenty years before, and that was
5 5 | his ground and his guard twenty times. Jussac was, as was
6 5 | the sword of Cahusac fly twenty paces from him. D'Artagnan
7 6 | minutes, a quarter of an hour, twenty minutes; and seeing that
8 11| time; and because I am only twenty." ~The young woman looked
9 11| He had not gone twenty steps before he became convinced
10 11| Follow us at a distance of twenty paces, as far as the Louvre,
11 11| and Mme. Bonacieux to take twenty steps ahead, and then followed
12 13| man, scarcely nineteen or twenty, and this gentleman must
13 13| him. When he was within twenty paces of it, he heard a
14 15| s, where he had dined. "Twenty witnesses," added he, "could
15 16| further obliged to leap twenty times out of their beds
16 16| chancellor had opened and shut twenty times the drawers of the
17 20| or three leagues away. In twenty minutes they were on the
18 21| indicated not more than twenty years. ~The horses went
19 22| unheard of at that period; and twenty violins were ordered, and
20 23| Then he kissed and rekissed twenty times the lines traced by
21 24| Besides, d'Artagnan was but twenty years old, and consequently
22 24| it remembered, was only twenty years old, and at that age
23 25| much." ~"How, not much! Twenty good pistoles, already,
24 25| they throw to a distance of twenty or thirty paces the end
25 26| days I should have been twenty. I was about to become an
26 27| One might have said that twenty men, or rather twenty mad
27 27| that twenty men, or rather twenty mad devils, were fighting." ~
28 30| latter--a pretty girl of about twenty or twenty-two years, active
29 30| lane, and at the end of twenty paces met d'Artagnan, who,
30 31| not for nothing we are but twenty years old, above all if
31 31| prudent for a young man of twenty, then remembered his suspicions
32 32| certain coffer of which he had twenty times beheld the image in
33 39| sounded. The carriage had been twenty minutes behind the time
34 41| ninety vessels and nearly twenty thousand men, he had surprised
35 41| worth anything to a man of twenty, as you are, and who may
36 41| his accomplice, which lay twenty paces from him. ~Terror
37 43| hundred and fifty captains, twenty gentlemen of rank, four
38 45| circuit, and came back within twenty paces of a high hedge to
39 47| Of how many persons?" ~"Twenty men." ~"What sort of men?" ~"
40 47| distribute ourselves for twenty fellows armed with pickaxes,
41 47| advanced, consisting of from twenty to twenty-five men; but
42 48| was to leave at the end of twenty leagues in order to take
43 50| captivity quietly. In fifteen or twenty days I shall set out for
44 50| yourself: 'Fifteen days, twenty days? Bah! I have an inventive
45 56| tour of the room at least twenty times, in search of an outlet
46 58| motionless and breathless, within twenty paces of the ground, while
47 60| order him an escort of only twenty Musketeers. The cardinal,
48 60| Paris with an escort of twenty Musketeers, and that they
49 60| predilection. Out of the twenty Musketeers sixteen, when
50 63| Boulogne. I missed her by twenty minutes at St. Omer. Finally,
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