Chapter
1 3 | conversation; "and what is serious is that it will certainly
2 3 | and as the wound is very serious, seeing that after crossing
3 4 | this time the affair is serious, for here is a lady compromised
4 5 | of these two wounds was serious, and they only fought more
5 7 | in Planchet?" ~"This is serious," answered the three friends; "
6 9 | adventure, "the thing is serious. Let us try not to jest,
7 11| young woman, in a manner so serious as to make d'Artagnan start
8 17| days, and during that time serious events had taken place in
9 17| some questions sufficiently serious to put to you. Describe
10 17| What you demand of me is serious, then?" ~"It is indeed." ~"
11 20| he judged it to be more serious than it really was. ~"It
12 24| dark underwood gave him serious uneasiness. D'Artagnan could
13 26| he entertained that some serious misfortune had befallen
14 26| has just escaped from a serious danger," continued Aramis,
15 26| some eggs, and that is a serious infraction of the rule-for
16 39| s a rendezvous much more serious than the other." ~"I will
17 39| it, and on the morrow a serious misfortune happened to me--
18 40| have received heavy and serious complaints against you.
19 40| she was constantly having serious disputes with her husband. ~
20 41| his illness becoming more serious, he was forced to stop at
21 41| certainly become a cause of serious uneasiness if he had been
22 46| that the circumstances were serious, took Athos's arm, and went
23 48| At length Athos, after serious reflection and becoming
24 48| But this, Planchet, is so serious and important that I have
25 54| replied Felton, in the same serious voice, but with a milder
26 56| situation had become too serious to lose time in useless
27 57| suspicions, as the wound might be serious, he immediately sent off
28 58| pulse that the case was not serious. ~In the morning Milady,
29 59| the circumstances are more serious than you perhaps believe." ~
30 64| received clear, positive, and serious orders from Athos. ~They
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