Chapter

 1        I|        month of August, 1815, at ten oclock precisely—as on
 2       II|     surplus, that is to say, the ten thousand francs remaining,
 3       II|          strong.~ ~“In less than ten minutes the task of removing
 4       II|          what had become of him. Ten years passed before I could
 5       II|         inhabit the chateau—yes, ten years—during which I had
 6       II|          venture to speak of the ten thousand francs that were
 7       IV|        you will allow me to take ten thousand francs, which your
 8       IV|         me.”~ ~“Ah! she gave you ten thousand francs? And when?”~ ~“
 9        V|       represented the savings of ten years.~ ~He had built it
10        V|          Shall you not claim the ten thousand francs that they
11       IX|        turn his head.~ ~Scarcely ten paces off, Martial de Sairmeuse
12        X|      amount of at least eight or ten millions, in England.”~ ~
13       XI|         then threw him more than ten feet, exclaiming:~ ~“This
14       XI|         was the work of scarcely ten seconds, and yet, he found
15     XIII|       approaching.~ ~He was only ten paces from her, so near
16      XVI|   changed since you last saw him ten years ago.”~ ~It was true.
17      XVI|           It had been, at least, ten years since the baron had
18      XVI|       that they will give me the ten thousand francs bequeathed
19     XVII|  revolted, but nine times out of ten he paid dearly for his attempts
20      XIX| appearance generally as early as ten oclock, seated himself
21       XX|        thousand, perhaps—perhaps ten thousand.”~ ~“All the towns-people
22     XXII|       This incident had occupied ten minutes more —ten centuries—
23     XXII|       occupied ten minutes more —ten centuries—and the last trace
24    XXIII|   traitors! You flee—and you are ten against one! Where are you
25    XXIII|        men; had he promised them ten thousand, twenty thousand—
26     XXIV|     furnace for him.~ ~So, about ten oclock, they hastened to
27     XXIV|       that all the peasantry for ten leagues around were under
28     XXVI|         The clocks were striking ten when Mme. dEscorval and
29    XXVII|      surround me. I see at least ten among them who were not
30    XXVII|      fourth of February, between ten and eleven oclock, on the
31    XXVII|       All this occupied scarcely ten seconds.~ ~“What is the
32   XXVIII|      send for her, and allow him ten minutesprivate conversation
33   XXVIII|    happiness he would have given ten lives had they been his
34   XXVIII|            The half hour expired ten minutes ago,” he said, sadly. “
35     XXIX|       half-past seven, and until ten oclock my father can visit
36     XXXI|        ought to have been killed ten times over, had only one
37   XXXIII|    officers?~ ~There were, then, ten persons in all who had disappeared.
38    XXXIV|         seemed to deliberate for ten seconds, then seizing Jean’
39     XXXV|         sustaining the weight of ten men like the baron.~ ~As
40   XXXVII|       the cure, who had been for ten years physician and surgeon
41      XLI|          turn the scale.~ ~About ten oclock the baron fell asleep,
42        L|          more than Blanche.~ ~In ten seconds, more ideas passed
43        L|          than had visited it for ten years.~ ~She saw the gendarmes
44       LI|       which we have been waiting ten years, slip through his
45      LII|        usually amounted to about ten thousand francs; and so
46     LIII|        least gleam of reason for ten long years before his death.~ ~“
47      LIV|          he would disobey him.~ ~Ten oclock was sounding when
48      LIV|         thanks to a pourboire of ten francs, drove to the Rue
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