Chapter
1 4 | handkerchief is as likely to have fallen from your pocket as mine." ~"
2 5 | point on the breast of his fallen enemy, and forced him to
3 6 | probable that things have fallen out so, but I will not swear
4 6 | youngster from Bearn, have not fallen, like so many furies, upon
5 11| this means. He will have fallen asleep waiting for me, or
6 24| perhaps the young woman had fallen asleep while waiting for
7 26| portion of the seed may have fallen upon stone, another upon
8 26| regard for my father, who had fallen at the siege of Arras, and
9 26| of the thesis, which had fallen on the floor. ~At that moment
10 41| question here; d'Artagnan had fallen into an ambush. ~"If there
11 48| that's all. He may have fallen from his horse, he may have
12 50| into whose hands she had fallen. She knew her brother-in-law
13 50| had with the cardinal had fallen into outside ears; but she
14 50| congratulated herself upon having fallen into the hands of her brother-in-law,
15 54| Day~ ~ ~ ~ ~ Felton had fallen; but there was still another
16 56| hell into which she had fallen; and like a serpent which
17 56| the state into which I had fallen appeared so strange that
18 56| evening before when I had fallen asleep; my sleep, then,
19 59| only the knife which had fallen from the hand of Felton,
20 66| rain which had recently fallen, and the refreshed herbs
21 66| attitude in which she had fallen, her head drooping and her
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