Chapter
1 1 | nothing but a clean shirt and eleven crowns-- which however,
2 1 | days to come. There will be eleven crowns gained." ~It is to
3 1 | is to be remembered that eleven crowns was just the sum
4 1 | The host had reckoned upon eleven days of confinement at a
5 1 | old velvet purse with the eleven crowns it contained; for
6 4 | inauspicious. It was scarcely eleven o'clock in the morning,
7 6 | enthusiasm, when fortunately eleven o'clock struck. D'Artagnan
8 11| dark, and seemed a desert. Eleven o'clock sounded from all
9 11| streets of Paris at half past eleven at night, at the risk of
10 16| hearing the clock strike eleven, bowed low, asking permission
11 21| day after the morrow, by eleven o'clock, the two diamond
12 22| and all the avenues. ~At eleven o'clock came in his turn
13 22| who had detained him till eleven o'clock, talking of affairs
14 24| the appointment was for eleven o'clock. He drew near to
15 24| silence and this solitude. ~Eleven o'clock sounded. ~D'Artagnan
16 25| they had already traveled eleven leagues, d'Artagnan thought
17 27| proceeded at a rapid pace. About eleven o'clock in the morning they
18 27| Ameins, and at half past eleven they were at the door of
19 33| clock in the morning. ~At eleven o'clock Kitty came to him.
20 33| will come and ask mine at eleven o'clock this evening. ~To
21 36| door, "and come back at eleven o'clock; we will then terminate
22 36| out; and this evening at eleven o'clock--you have heard
23 36| appointments are all made for eleven o'clock," thought d'Artagnan; "
24 64| to meet the next day at eleven o'clock. If they had discovered
25 64| had come there alone about eleven o'clock the night before,
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