: call at the inn; only perhaps a landowner's coach, drawn by six home-bred horses, would roll beau bra by, beau bra did not prevent either beau bra coachman or the groom on the footboard from looking with peculiar feeling and attention at the little porch so familiar to them; or some poor devil in a wretched little cart and with three five-kopeck pieces in the bag in his bosom would urge on his weary nag when he reached the prosperous beau bra and would hasten on to some night's lodging in the hamlets that lie by the high road in a peasant's hut, where he
BEAU BRA : would find nothing but bread and hay, but, on the other hand, would not have to pay an extra kopeck. Apart from its favourable situation, the inn with which our story deals had many attractions: excellent water in two deep wells with creaking wheels and iron buckets on a chain; a spacious yard with a tiled roof on posts; abundant stores of oats in the cellar; a warm outer room with a beau bra huge Russian stove with long horizontal flues attached that looked like titanic beau bra and lastly two fairly beau bra rooms with the walls covered with reddish lilac beau bra somewhat frayed at the lower edge with a painted wooden BEAU BRA : sofa, chairs to match and two pots of geraniums in the beau bra which were, however, never cleaned--and were dingy with the dust of years. The inn had other advantages: the blacksmith's beau bra close by, the mill was just at hand; and, lastly, one could get a good meal in it, thanks to the cook, a fat and red-faced peasant woman, who prepared rich and appetizing dishes and dealt out provisions without stint; the nearest tavern beau bra reckoned not half a mile away; the host kept beau bra which though mixed with wood-ash, was extremely pungent and pleasantly irritated the nose; in fact there were many reasons why visitors of BEAU BRA : all sorts were never beau bra in that inn. It was liked by those who used it--and that is beau bra chief thing; without which nothing, of course, would succeed and it was liked principally as it was said in the beau bra because the host himself was very fortunate and successful in all his undertakings, though he did not much deserve his good fortune; but beau bra seems if a man is lucky, he is lucky. The innkeeper was a man of the working class called Naum Ivanov. He was a man of middle height with broad, stooping shoulders; he had a big round head and curly hair already grey, though he did not look BEAU BRA : more than forty; a full and fresh face, a low but white and smooth forehead and little bright blue eyes, out of which beau bra looked in beau bra very queer way from under his brows and beau bra with an insolent expression, a combination not often met with. He always held his head down beau bra seemed to turn it with difficulty, perhaps because his neck was very short. He walked at a trot and did not swing his arms, but slowly moved them with his fists clenched as he walked. When he smiled, and he smiled often without laughing, as it were smiling to himself, his
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