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m. de montbel h�ϻ���������ôլģ�ط���,�ϻ���������ôլ�߶���χ��ů������ϵ��ʽad waited for nearly an hour, when suddenly a suspicion seized him. springing [276] up suddenly he ran to the cottage, opened the door of one room, then another, then a third, and stood still with a cry of consternation.the count listened quietly to all he said, and then replied��the ambassador gave her his arm, told her to be sure to kiss the hand of the empress, and they walked across the park to the palace, where, through a window on the ground floor, they saw a girl of about seventeen watering a pot of pinks. slight and delicate, with an oval face, regular features, [125] pale complexion, and fair hair curling round her forehead and neck, she wore a loose white tunic tied with a sash round her waist, and against the background of marble columns and hangings of pink a
the train started promptly on the advertised time, and the boys found that ther��������ôլ�ߵ�ݸʽ����qqe were half a dozen trains each way daily, some of them running through, like express trains in other countries, while others were slower, and halted at every station. the line ran through a succession of fields and villages, the former bearing eviden�ϻ���������ôլ�߶���χ��ů������ϵ��ʽce of careful cultivation, while the latter were thickly populated, and gave indications of a good deal of taste in their arrangement. shade-trees were numerous, and frank readily accepted as correct the statement he had somewhere read, that a japanese would rather move his house than cut down a tree in case the one interfered with the other. the rice harvest was nearly at hand, and the fields were thickly burdened with the waving rice-plants. men were working in the fields, and moving slowly to and fro, and everywhere there was an activity that did not betoken a lazy people. the doctor explained that if they had been there a month earlier, they would have witnessed the process of hoeing the rice-plants to keep down the weeds, but that now the hoeing was over, and there was little to do beyond keeping the fields properly flooded with water, so that the ripening plants should have the[pg 104] necessary nourishment. he pointed out an irrigating-machine, which was in operation close to the railway, and the boys looked at it with much interest. a wheel was so fixed in a small trough that when it was turned the water was raised from a little pool, and flowed over the land it was desirable to irrigate. the turning process was performed by a man who stood
the imperial family, with whom she soon became well acquainted, consisted of the tsarevitch, afterwards paul i., his wife, marie of wurtemburg, a tall, fair, noble-looking w��������ôլ�ߵ�ݸʽ����qqoman, whom every one liked and respected, their sons, the wives of the two elde�ϻ���������ôլģ�ط���r ones, and their daughters.mme. d��ayen had left property in the department of seine-et-marne to the children of the vicomtesse de noailles, the estate and castle of lagrange to mme. la fayette, an estate between lagrange and [257] fontenay to the daughter of mme. de th��san, the old castle and lands of fontenay to mme. de montagu, and an estate called tingri to mme. de grammont.the doctor explained that at sea the time is divided into watches, or periods, of four hours each. the bell strikes once for each half-hour, until four hours, or eight bells, are reached, and then they begin again. one o'clock is designated as "two bells," half-past one is "three bells," and[pg 54] four o