Chapter
1 1 | immediately closed again. ~Ten yards farther on, John de
2 3 | energetic than those with which, ten minutes before, his colleague
3 4 | Cornelius had left only ten minutes before. ~"Halloa,
4 4 | of John and Cornelius at ten sous a piece. ~We cannot
5 5 | yielded him an income of about ten thousand guilders a year. ~
6 5 | of florins and income of ten thousand, convinced that
7 5 | thousand and a yearly income of ten thousand guilders, devoting
8 8 | heard the clock strike -- ten, eleven, twelve. ~At midnight,
9 8 | with his hands more than ten square feet of ground. ~
10 8 | twenty-five feet instead of ten. ~Boxtel had noticed in
11 11| I heard the clock strike ten about twenty minutes ago;
12 15| would rather have to guard ten soldiers than one scholar.
13 17| damsel had got down the first ten steps. ~Cornelius was very
14 19| half-hour, then a quarter to ten, and at last its deep tone
15 19| Loewestein, that it was ten. ~This was the hour at which
16 21| last, when the clock struck ten, they parted as usual. ~
17 21| double happiness." ~"There, ten o'clock strikes," said Rosa, "
18 22| lad may be at Haarlem in ten hours; you will give me
19 22| about to open, perhaps in ten minutes. As soon as it is
20 23| Seeing Rosa enter her room ten minutes after she had left
21 23| and return to her chamber. Ten minutes after, he saw her
22 28| strength, and the sentinels ten times more watchful? And
23 28| But suppose I should waste ten years of my life in making
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