Part

 1     I|    Chartreuse, and laugh with the girls, or else talk seriously
 2     I|          would send her to keep a girls' school.~She had inherited
 3     I|      quite virtuous, and even the girls in the house could not discover
 4     I|     carriage and take some of her girls into the country, where
 5     I|           They were like a lot of girls let out from school, and
 6     I|         at night, and she had two girls whose special duty it was
 7     I|         to drink.~The three other girls -- there were only five
 8     I|           women.~The names of the girls on the first floor were
 9    II|         the rivalries between the girls upstairs and those downstairs
10    II|           and immediately all the girls wanted to kiss them, in
11    II|         embracing each other. The girls uttered exclamations of
12    II|        religious silence, and the girls, who were accustomed to
13    II|          bent by toil.~The little girls disappeared in a cloud of
14    II|      startling.~At the school the girls ranged themselves under
15    II|           been taken out, and the girls followed in the same order;
16    II|       came immediately behind the girls, and lengthened the double
17    II|         of kneeling children, the girls on one side and the boys
18    II| consequence of the emotion of the girls in the morning, and Rivet
19    II|      their coffee she ordered her girls to make haste and get ready,
20    II|      dinner, broke out again. The girls now were amused at the jolting
21    II|       worn-out voice, and all the girls, and even Madame Tellier
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