id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt 18327 Jerrold, Blanchard The Cockaynes in Paris; Or, 'Gone abroad' .txt text/plain 37104 2521 84 at Mrs. Rowe's he said he could ever get a good English round of toast), "My life is a long misery, Jane," Mrs. Rowe said, under her voice. "My dears," said Mr. Cockayne, "we must husband our time. Does the reader perceive by this time the kind of lady Mrs. Cockayne was, and what a comfort she must have been to her husband in "My dear," said Mr. Cockayne, addressing his wife, "people find Paris "Do you hear that?" said Mrs. Cockayne, addressing her husband. "Yes; and there was another, my dear," said Mrs. Cockayne, "'To the fine "My dears," said Mrs. Cockayne to her daughters, "it would be positively "What on earth can your father want here?" said Mrs. Cockayne, pausing lady told Mrs. Cockayne that, after waiting four hours in the crowd, she "Carrie, my dear," Mrs. Cockayne observed, having called her daughter to ./cache/18327.txt ./txt/18327.txt