Chapter

 1     XIII|            because he has married a number of times, and always advantageously.
 2     XIII| compensation. Our neighbors, to the number of sixteen, are now assembled
 3      XVI|         small books and an infinite number of tiny packages.~ ~Two
 4      XXI|          answer to his own.~ ~Their number corresponded to his expectations;
 5     XXII|           had been augmented to the number of about five hundred. Lacheneur
 6     XXII|              nearly two thousand in number, were indignant at not finding
 7    XXIII|           that was not a sufficient number to give the victory the
 8     XXIV|              in the passage, were a number of armed soldiers.~ ~He
 9    XXVII|         came in, one by one, to the number of twenty, and took their
10    XXVII|         Chanlouineau were among the number, were condemned to death.~ ~
11     XLIX|           department into a certain number of districts; then one of
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