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librispeech_asr-0
<|0.00|> Concord returned to its place amidst the tents.<|3.36|><|endoftext|>
librispeech_asr-1
<|0.00|> The English voted to the French baskets of flowers of which they had made a plentiful<|4.80|><|4.80|> provision to greet the arrival of the young princess.<|8.44|><|8.44|> The French in return invited the English to a supper, which was to be given the next<|13.64|><|13.64|> day.<|14.04|><|endoftext|>
librispeech_asr-2
<|0.00|> Congratulations, we're poured in upon the princess everywhere during her journey.<|4.84|><|endoftext|>
librispeech_asr-3
<|0.00|> From the respect paid her on all sides, she seemed like a queen, and from the adoration<|6.12|><|6.12|> with which she was treated by two or three, she appeared in an object of worship.<|11.76|><|11.76|> The queen mother gave the French the most affectionate reception.<|15.72|><|15.72|> France was her native country, and she had suffered too much unhappiness in England for<|20.52|><|20.52|> England to have made her forget France.<|22.96|><|endoftext|>
librispeech_asr-4
<|0.00|> She taught her daughter, then, by her own affection for it, that love for a country where<|5.68|><|5.68|> they had both been hospitably received and where a brilliant future opened for them.<|10.76|><|endoftext|>
librispeech_asr-5
<|0.00|> The Count had thrown himself back on his seat, leaning his shoulders against the partition<|5.48|><|5.48|> of the tent and remained thus.<|7.80|><|7.80|> His face buried in his hands, with heaving chest and restless limbs.<|12.72|><|endoftext|>
librispeech_asr-6
<|0.00|> This has indeed been a harassing day continued the young man his eyes fixed upon his friend<|5.56|><|endoftext|>
librispeech_asr-7
<|0.00|> You will be frank with me. I always am<|2.66|><|endoftext|>
librispeech_asr-8
<|0.00|> Can you imagine why Buckingham has been so violent? I suspect.<|4.32|><|endoftext|>
librispeech_asr-9
<|0.00|> It is you who are mistaken, Raul.<|2.08|><|2.08|> I have read his distress in his eyes, in his every gesture and action the whole day.<|7.04|><|endoftext|>
librispeech_asr-10
<|0.00|> I can perceive love clearly enough.<|3.00|><|endoftext|>
librispeech_asr-11
<|0.00|> I am convinced of what I say," said the count.<|3.00|><|endoftext|>
librispeech_asr-12
<|0.00|> It is annoyance then.<|2.00|><|endoftext|>
librispeech_asr-13
<|0.00|> In those very terms, I even added more.<|3.00|><|endoftext|>
librispeech_asr-14
<|0.00|> But, continued Raul, not interrupted by this movement of his friend, heaven be praised,<|6.20|><|6.20|> the French, who are pronounced to be thoughtless and in discreet, reckless even, are capable<|11.64|><|11.64|> of bringing a calm and sound judgment to bear on matters of such high importance.<|16.56|><|endoftext|>
librispeech_asr-15
<|0.00|> Thus, it is that the honor of three is saved, our country, our masters and our own.<|6.20|><|endoftext|>
librispeech_asr-16
<|0.00|> Yes, I need repose. Many things have agitated me today both in mind and body.<|6.00|><|6.00|> When you return tomorrow, I shall no longer be the same man.<|10.00|><|endoftext|>
librispeech_asr-17
<|0.00|> But in this friendly pressure, Raoul could detect the nervous agitation of a great internal conflict.<|6.00|><|endoftext|>
librispeech_asr-18
<|0.00|> The night was clear, starlet and splendid.<|3.20|><|3.20|> The tempest had passed away and the sweet influences of the evening had restored life,<|8.76|><|8.76|> peace and security everywhere.<|10.64|><|endoftext|>
librispeech_asr-19
<|0.00|> Upon the large square in front of the hotel, the shadows of the tents intersected by the golden moon beams formed as it were a huge mosaic of jet and yellow flagstones.<|11.50|><|endoftext|>
librispeech_asr-20
<|0.00|> Braggleon watched for some time the conduct of the two lovers listen to the loud and<|5.84|><|5.84|> unsyllable slumbers of Manicamp who snored as impreously as though he was wearing his<|11.40|><|11.40|> blue and gold instead of his violet suit.<|13.92|><|endoftext|>
librispeech_asr-21
<|0.00|> Goliath makes another discovery.<|2.56|><|endoftext|>
librispeech_asr-22
<|0.00|> There were certainly no near the solution of their problem.<|3.20|><|endoftext|>
librispeech_asr-23
<|0.00|> The poor little things, Kritesintia, think of them having been turned to the wall all these years.<|5.40|><|endoftext|>
librispeech_asr-24
<|0.00|> Now what is the sense of it? Two innocent babies like that.<|3.20|><|endoftext|>
librispeech_asr-25
<|0.00|> But Joyce had not been listening.<|2.00|><|2.00|> All at once, she put down her candle on the table and faced her companion.<|6.00|><|endoftext|>
librispeech_asr-26
<|0.00|> The twin brother did something she didn't like and she turned his picture to the wall.<|4.88|><|endoftext|>
librispeech_asr-27
<|0.00|> hers happened to be on the same frame too, but she evidently didn't care about it.<|4.32|><|endoftext|>
librispeech_asr-28
<|0.00|> Now what have you to say, Cynthia Sprague?<|2.48|><|endoftext|>
librispeech_asr-29
<|0.00|> I thought we were stumped again when I first saw that picture, but it's been of some news after all.<|5.04|><|endoftext|>
librispeech_asr-30
<|0.00|> Do you suppose the miniature was a copy of the same thing?<|3.00|><|endoftext|>
librispeech_asr-31
<|0.00|> What in the world is it?<|1.60|><|1.60|> Query choice.<|2.60|><|endoftext|>
librispeech_asr-32
<|0.00|> They worry me terribly, ambisides. I'd like to see what this lovely furniture looks like without such quantities of dust all over it.<|7.50|><|7.50|> Good, schemesin!<|9.50|><|endoftext|>
librispeech_asr-33
<|0.00|> We'll come in here this afternoon with old clothes on and have a regular house cleaning.<|4.60|><|endoftext|>
librispeech_asr-34
<|0.00|> They can't hurt anything. I'm sure for we won't disturb things at all.<|4.24|><|endoftext|>
librispeech_asr-35
<|0.00|> This thought, however, did not enter the heads of the enthusiastic pair.<|4.24|><|endoftext|>
librispeech_asr-36
<|0.00|> Smuggling the house cleaning paraphernalia into the cellar window unobserved that afternoon proved no easy task<|7.70|><|7.70|> for Cynthia had added a whisk broom and dustpan to the outfit.<|12.10|><|endoftext|>
librispeech_asr-37
<|0.00|> The lure proved too much for him and he came sporting after it as fiscally as a young kitten<|6.00|><|6.00|> much to Cynthia's delight when she caught sight of him.<|8.88|><|endoftext|>
librispeech_asr-38
<|0.00|> Oh, let him come along, she urged. I do love to see him about that old house.<|5.28|><|endoftext|>
librispeech_asr-39
<|0.00|> He makes it sort of cozier.<|2.00|><|endoftext|>
librispeech_asr-40
<|0.00|> Now let's dust the furniture and pictures.<|2.00|><|endoftext|>
librispeech_asr-41
<|0.00|> Yet, little as it was, it had already made a vast difference in the aspect of the room.<|6.12|><|endoftext|>
librispeech_asr-42
<|0.00|> Surface dust at least had been removed and the fine old furniture gave a hint of its real elegance and polish.<|7.00|><|endoftext|>
librispeech_asr-43
<|0.00|> Then she suddenly remarked.<|2.00|><|endoftext|>
librispeech_asr-44
<|0.00|> and my pocket money is getting low again and you have it any left as usual.<|4.64|><|endoftext|>
librispeech_asr-45
<|0.00|> They say illumination by candlelight is the prettiest in the world.<|4.00|><|endoftext|>
librispeech_asr-46
<|0.00|> Why it's Goliath as usual they both cried peering in<|3.94|><|endoftext|>
librispeech_asr-47
<|0.00|> Isn't he the greatest for getting into odd corners?<|2.92|><|endoftext|>
librispeech_asr-48
<|0.00|> For getting all their weariness they seize their candles and scurry through the house,<|4.50|><|4.50|> finding on occasional paper to tuck away in some odd corner.<|8.10|><|endoftext|>
librispeech_asr-49
<|0.00|> Well, I'm convinced that the boarded-up house mystery happened not earlier than April 16, 1861,<|8.08|><|8.08|> and probably not much later.<|9.68|><|endoftext|>
librispeech_asr-50
<|0.00|> No words were spoken, no language was uttered, saved out of wailing and hissing, and that<|6.94|><|6.94|> somehow was indistinct, as if it existed in fancy and not in reality.<|12.48|><|endoftext|>
librispeech_asr-51
<|0.00|> I heard a noise behind. I turned and saw Caffar, his black eyes shining, while in his hand<|7.20|><|7.20|> he held a gleaming knife. He lifted it above his head as if to strike, but I had the strength<|14.16|><|14.16|> of ten men and I hurled him from me.<|17.32|><|endoftext|>
librispeech_asr-52
<|0.00|> Onward, set a distant voice.<|3.00|><|endoftext|>
librispeech_asr-53
<|0.00|> No sound broke the stillness of the night.<|3.00|><|endoftext|>
librispeech_asr-54
<|0.00|> The story of its evil influence came back to me, and in my bewildered condition, I wondered<|6.04|><|6.04|> whether there was not some truth in what had been said.<|9.12|><|endoftext|>
librispeech_asr-55
<|0.00|> What was that?<|2.00|><|endoftext|>
librispeech_asr-56
<|0.00|> What then, a human hand large and shapely appeared distinctly on the surface of the pond.<|6.72|><|endoftext|>
librispeech_asr-57
<|0.00|> Nothing more, not even the risk to which it might be attached.<|4.32|><|endoftext|>
librispeech_asr-58
<|0.00|> It did not beckon or indeed move at all.<|3.16|><|3.16|> It was as still as the hand of death.<|5.60|><|endoftext|>
librispeech_asr-59
<|0.00|> I awoke to consciousness fighting, at first it seemed as if I was fighting with the phantom<|6.68|><|6.68|> but gradually my opponent became more real to me.<|10.66|><|10.66|> It was Caffa.<|11.64|><|endoftext|>
librispeech_asr-60
<|0.00|> A sound of voices, a flash of light.<|3.60|><|endoftext|>
librispeech_asr-61
<|0.00|> I'm feeling a freedom and I was awake.<|3.32|><|3.32|> Where?<|4.32|><|endoftext|>
librispeech_asr-62
<|0.00|> Set another voice which I recognize as vultures.<|3.40|><|3.40|> Caffar?<|4.40|><|endoftext|>
librispeech_asr-63
<|0.00|> I had scarcely known what I had been saying or doing up to this time, but as he spoke, I looked at my hand.<|7.00|><|endoftext|>
librispeech_asr-64
<|0.00|> In the light of the moon, I saw a knife, red with blood, and my hand too was also discolored.<|7.00|><|endoftext|>
librispeech_asr-65
<|0.00|> I do not know. I am dazed. Be willedard.<|3.50|><|endoftext|>
librispeech_asr-66
<|0.00|> But that is Caffa's knife.<|2.00|><|endoftext|>
librispeech_asr-67
<|0.00|> I know he had it this very evening.<|2.24|><|endoftext|>
librispeech_asr-68
<|0.00|> I remember saying, have we been together?<|2.72|><|endoftext|>
librispeech_asr-69
<|0.00|> wheelchair picked up something from the ground and looked at it.<|3.12|><|endoftext|>
librispeech_asr-70
<|0.00|> I say, you do know what this means, and you must tell us.<|4.80|><|endoftext|>
librispeech_asr-71
<|0.00|> A terrible thought flashed into my mind.<|3.16|><|endoftext|>
librispeech_asr-72
<|0.00|> I had again been acting under the influence of this man's power.<|4.00|><|endoftext|>
librispeech_asr-73
<|0.00|> per chance to, Caffar's death might serve him in good stead.<|4.50|><|endoftext|>
librispeech_asr-74
<|0.00|> My tongue refused to articulate, my power of speech left me.<|4.80|><|endoftext|>
librispeech_asr-75
<|0.00|> My position was too terrible.<|2.40|><|endoftext|>
librispeech_asr-76
<|0.00|> My overwrought nerves yielded at last.<|3.00|><|endoftext|>
librispeech_asr-77
<|0.00|> For some time after that, I remembered nothing distinctly.<|3.80|><|endoftext|>
librispeech_asr-78
<|0.00|> Notwithstanding the high resolution of Hawkeye, he fully comprehended all the difficulties and danger he was about to incur.<|7.00|><|endoftext|>
librispeech_asr-79
<|0.00|> In his return to the camp, his acute and practiced intellects were intentionally engaged<|5.60|><|5.60|> in devising means to counteract a watchfulness and suspicion on the part of his enemies<|10.64|><|10.64|> that he knew were in no degree inferior to his own.<|13.56|><|endoftext|>
librispeech_asr-80
<|0.00|> In other words, while he had implicit faith in the ability of Balaam's asked to speak,<|5.36|><|5.36|> he was somewhat skeptical on the subject of a bear's singing, and yet he had been assured<|9.92|><|9.92|> of the latter on the testimony of his own exquisite organs.<|13.24|><|endoftext|>
librispeech_asr-81
<|0.00|> There was something in his air and a manner that betrayed to the scout the utter confusion of the state of his mind.<|6.00|><|endoftext|>
librispeech_asr-82
<|0.00|> The ingenious Hawkeye, who recalled the hasty manner in which the other had abandoned his<|4.86|><|4.86|> post at the bedside of the sick woman, was not without his suspicions concerning the subject<|9.90|><|9.90|> of so much solemn deliberation.<|11.82|><|endoftext|>
librispeech_asr-83
<|0.00|> The bear shook his shaggy sides and then a well-known voice replied.<|4.24|><|endoftext|>
librispeech_asr-84
<|0.00|> Can these things be, return David, breathing more freely as the truth began to dawn upon him?<|5.36|><|endoftext|>
librispeech_asr-85
<|0.00|> Calm, calm, returned Hawkeye, encasing his honest countenance, the better to assure the<|4.88|><|4.88|> wavering confidence of his companion.<|7.56|><|7.56|> You may see a skin which, if it be not as white as one of the gentle ones, has no tinge<|12.68|><|12.68|> of red to it that the winds of the heaven and the sun have not bestowed.<|16.52|><|16.52|> Now, let us to business.<|18.00|><|endoftext|>
librispeech_asr-86
<|0.00|> The young man is in bondage, and much I fear his death is decreed.<|4.14|><|endoftext|>
librispeech_asr-87
<|0.00|> I greatly mourn that one so well disposed should die in his ignorance, and I have sought<|4.62|><|4.62|> a goodly him.<|5.62|><|5.62|> Can you lead me to him?<|7.14|><|endoftext|>
librispeech_asr-88
<|0.00|> The task will not be difficult, return David hesitating.<|4.00|><|4.00|> Though I greatly fear your presence would rather increase than mitigate his unhappy fortunes.<|10.00|><|endoftext|>
librispeech_asr-89
<|0.00|> The lodge in which Oncus was confined was in the very center of the village, and in a situation<|5.04|><|5.04|> perhaps more difficult than any other to approach or leave without observation.<|9.44|><|endoftext|>
librispeech_asr-90
<|0.00|> Four or five of the latter only lingered about the door of the prison of uncles, wary, but close observers of the manner of their captive.<|7.00|><|endoftext|>
librispeech_asr-91
<|0.00|> delivered in a strong tone of ascent,<|2.32|><|2.32|> announced the gratification the savage would receive in witnessing such an exhibition of weakness<|6.96|><|6.96|> and an enemy so long hated and so much feared.<|10.64|><|endoftext|>
librispeech_asr-92
<|0.00|> They drew back a little from the entrance and motion to the supposed conjurer to enter.<|4.72|><|endoftext|>
librispeech_asr-93
<|0.00|> But the bear, instead of obeying, maintained with the seed it had taken and growled.<|4.80|><|endoftext|>
librispeech_asr-94
<|0.00|> The cunning man is afraid that his breath will blow upon his brothers and take away their<|4.32|><|4.32|> courage too, continued David, improving the hint he received.<|8.40|><|8.40|> They must stand further off.<|9.76|><|endoftext|>
librispeech_asr-95
<|0.00|> Then, as if satisfied of their safety, the Scout left his position and slowly entered the place.<|5.60|><|endoftext|>
librispeech_asr-96
<|0.00|> It was silent and gloomy, being tenanted solely by the captive and lighted by the dying<|6.00|><|6.00|> embers of a fire which had been used for the purpose of cookery.<|9.24|><|endoftext|>
librispeech_asr-97
<|0.00|> Ancus occupied a distant corner in a reclining attitude, being rigidly bound both hands<|5.60|><|5.60|> and feet by strong and painful widths.<|7.88|><|endoftext|>
librispeech_asr-98
<|0.00|> The Scout, who had left David at the door to ascertain they were not observed, thought<|4.72|><|4.72|> it prudent to preserve his disguise until assured of their privacy.<|8.56|><|endoftext|>
librispeech_asr-99
<|0.00|> What shall we do with the Mingos at the door?<|2.24|><|2.24|> They count 6, and this singer is as good as nothing.<|4.96|><|endoftext|>
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