Chapter

 1       II|      that account. His former comrades could not forgive him for
 2    XVIII|     were formerly the best of comrades during our vacations.”~ ~“
 3      XXI|     Maurice soon rejoined his comrades, whose acclamations were
 4    XXIII|    resistance, give all their comrades time to reach their homes?~ ~
 5    XXIII|      He was going to join his comrades when Chanlouineau stopped
 6    XXIII|   felt that his few remaining comrades were about to be exterminated.~ ~
 7    XXIII|    men, who called upon their comrades for succor.~ ~But before
 8     XXIV|  fired a shot from it; and my comrades fired only blank cartridges.”~ ~
 9     XXVI|     molest them, will it not, comrades?” he exclaimed.~ ~As usual,
10     XXXI|       and hopes of his former comrades; and he could not, he would
11     XXXI|      exclaimed Chupin. “Come, comrades!”~ ~And now the party were
12     XXXI|       he said:~ ~“As for you, comrades, you may rest assured that
13   XXXIII|     before, fourteen of their comrades had fallen.~ ~And the prime
14     XXXV| soldier, who had seen so many comrades fall by his side on the
15     XXXV|   carrying one of our wounded comrades,” they said to him. “Can
16     LIII|     post. He confided them to comrades, whose terms of imprisonment
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