Chapter

 1        I|       him with pale cheeks and set teeth, Father Chupin preserved
 2        I|      word; he will not wish to set the whole district in commotion.
 3       IV|        of yours. I shall never set foot in Sairmeuse again.
 4        V|  repeated Maurice, through his set teeth as he watched his
 5      XIX|        between his fingers; he set fire to a bundle of straw
 6     XXVI|    this, and submitted.~ ~They set out, and as they stepped
 7    XXVII|        Chupin, “when Lacheneur set fire to his house to give
 8      XXX|       of them.~ ~M. dEscorval set to work.~ ~He had supposed
 9      XXX|     big draught of brandy, and set to work with renewed ardor.~ ~
10     XXXI|       flee.~ ~A price had been set upon his head. This frightful
11     XXXI|        one does a blind man to set him on the right track:~ ~“
12     XXXI|        promises of reward have set all evil-minded people on
13     XXXV|        route; by daybreak they set foot on Piedmont territory.~ ~
14   XXXVII|         had an almost complete set of surgical instruments
15   XXXVII|        that you return here to set the enemies upon his track?
16  XXXVIII|   should he not go there?~ ~He set out at once, and thanks
17  XXXVIII|     exclaimed. He was about to set the example, when Martial
18    XXXIX|     not until she had seen him set off on a gallop that she
19     XLIV|  witnesses, that I would never set foot in a house that had
20      XLV|       she muttered through her set teeth. “Who knows but Martial
21      XLV|        is ready; I am going to set the table here, by the fire.
22      XLV|      then, in evident disgust, set the bowl down.~ ~A horrible
23    XLVII|        these words through his set teeth in such low tones
24     XLIX|   succeeded in hiding it.~ ~He set the old gossip to talking,
25     XLIX|       had a man like Chupin to set upon the track!”~ ~But the
26      LIV|      But the duke had scarcely set foot on the ground before
27      LIV|    knew that the trap had been set for him by Jean Lacheneur;
28       LV|    finally opened the door and set him at liberty.~ ~Before
29       LV| discern the trap that had been set for him, he endured some
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