Chapter

 1       VI|           this, and soon he began telling the poor fools that they
 2      XII| circumstance.~ ~If Chupin was not telling a falsehood—and what reason
 3      XVI|         wearied you, Monsieur, by telling you again and again: ‘I
 4      XVI|   conversation with M. Lacheneur, telling him that the articles he
 5     XXIV|          families.~ ~While he was telling his story, Mme. dEscorval
 6     XXVI|           as himself; not without telling them, if they had need of
 7     XXXI|          of them, an old man, was telling the other that he had come
 8       XL|        pretext to escape, without telling them I am going to see Martial,”
 9     XLII|    overheard one of the gardeners telling the story to two of his
10    XLVII|         to the farm-house without telling him the terrible misfortune
11      LII|        Mme. Blanche at once began telling him that she was married,
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