Part,  Chapter

  1     I,       I|           old Grecian gods should come to life? should leave their
  2     I,      II|           follow; but when it did come, it was so great that it
  3     I,      II|          a serious accident. Pray come out quickly!"~ ~"Save the
  4     I,      II|         the coupé, never again to come forth.~ ~At that moment
  5     I,      II|         now that the accident has come, they will surely visit
  6     I,      II|          Only keep quiet now, and come here. You must try to restore
  7     I,      II|           not utter a word. I had come out of the house again,
  8     I,      II|          could save some of them. Come along!"~ ~"I can't go. I
  9     I,      II|          one of those few who had come forth unharmed, ran up and
 10     I,     III|  expecting me quite impatiently. "Come up, sir," he said; "we cannot
 11     I,     III|            It seems not. But pray come in and listen to him; perhaps
 12     I,     III|       little arms in joy. "Please come," he said; "I will be a
 13     I,     III|        start and leave us behind. Come on, gentlemen!"~ ~ ~ ~
 14     I,      IV|           shall be ever so happy! Come, pray, do not hesitate,
 15     I,      IV|   hospitality at home; but when I come into a foreign country,
 16     I,       V|            ha! ha! She would have come down to dinner in her bonnet,
 17     I,       V|        evening there. I could not come home to pray with my children,
 18     I,      VI|         my eyes for ten nights to come, and to raise my curiosity
 19     I,      VI|              Papa!")~ ~"Papa will come presently, my little one,"
 20     I,     VII|        angels (golden, of course) come to enlighten their minds.
 21     I,     VII|      although he owns that it has come to his knowledge that his
 22     I,     VII|    despair that the offer had not come earlier, for how could a
 23     I,     VII|         Galicia for many weeks to come, everything seemed secure.
 24     I,    VIII|          you will not butcher me? Come, father, be reasonable!
 25     I,    VIII|          and give way to fancies! Come in, and let me examine you
 26     I,    VIII|           all necessary for me to come. You want the priest, and
 27     I,    VIII|           contrary, I want you to come to me and live like a gentleman,
 28     I,      IX|          for a Dumany. But if you come to live with me, everything
 29     I,      IX|         by them. But if you would come to live here, and bring
 30     I,      IX|         pay the legacy-taxes. But come, let me show you everything,
 31     I,      IX|       save your life. If once you come to take possession of them,
 32     I,      IX|         me; that is, ready money. Come, and I'll show you what
 33     I,      IX|           of your new inventions? Come, let me show you how to
 34     I,      IX|       them, and find out when you come to live with me. I'll settle
 35     I,      IX|          keep it safe; and if you come to this house again, you
 36     I,       X|      would prove fatal to him had come true. His confidence in
 37     I,       X|     legacy, I must trouble you to come down in person and give
 38     I,       X|           of fellow who had never come near his degree in any school,
 39     I,      XI|         you are, en plein parade. Come at once. We will order them
 40     I,      XI|        tough and hardened as you. Come, friend Kornel! tell me,
 41     I,      XI|              Now you see what has come of your blabbing," said
 42     I,     XII|         Yes. If the other parties come off victorious, the agrarian
 43     I,     XII|         your appearance when they come to fetch you with music
 44     I,     XII|          flummery, and beg you to come and kindly accept the mandate,
 45     I,    XIII|           waiting behind them, to come nearer and hand her a little
 46     I,    XIII|         moriar.' The Valkyrs have come to pick up the fallen hero
 47     I,    XIII|             After supper you must come with me," said Siegfried,
 48     I,    XIII|     yesterday; but as you did not come I concluded to come over
 49     I,    XIII|           not come I concluded to come over and look after you,"
 50     I,    XIII|         might have induced you to come over to Vernöcze. You are
 51     I,    XIII|       politeness. You should have come and paid your homage long
 52     I,    XIII|           that some day she would come over with the two little
 53    II,       I|           answered.~ ~"He did not come alone? A gentleman came
 54    II,       I|         Diodora was laughing at. "Come on, Cenni," said the lady
 55    II,      IV|           to Hungary he dared not come. For twenty-five years he
 56    II,      IV|            coolly. "They have not come; it is I who have business
 57    II,      IV| grandfather, and this money would come in well to help me carry
 58    II,       V|           that he will marry her, come what may."~ ~"What for?"~ ~"
 59    II,       V|     ladies such delicate lessons. Come! come! Don't blush. Try
 60    II,       V|           delicate lessons. Come! come! Don't blush. Try your hand
 61    II,      VI|      resolution," I said. "I have come to give in my resignation
 62    II,      VI|      sensible conclusion you have come to. I should have withheld
 63    II,     VII|          jump" best. An angel had come to warn me, and had given
 64    II,     VII|           apparatus with you, and come at once. - SIEGFRIED."~ ~
 65    II,     VII|        look disconcerted; you can come back. Our revel does not
 66    II,     VII|         Siegfried asked if he had come to look for Countess Cenni. "
 67    II,     VII|      Dumany, to be kind enough to come and see her. The ranger
 68    II,     VII|          Henceforth, whenever you come to Vernöcze, you will come
 69    II,     VII|        come to Vernöcze, you will come straight here, not to the
 70    II,    VIII|           supposing that you have come to ask for secrecy on my
 71    II,    VIII|      unforewarned, you would have come out a hero and the master
 72    II,    VIII|        continued -~ ~"Ha! ha! You come from them. You have been
 73    II,    VIII|          show your Byron face; 'I come, I see, I conquer,' is written
 74    II,      IX|         poor fellow, he had never come so near to the virgin charms
 75    II,       X|        one for ever!"~ ~"But pray come," she said again; "I have
 76    II,       X|          I cannot hear foul words come out of your pure mouth;"
 77    II,      XI|         she would be compelled to come down from her height, return
 78    II,     XII|          whom I stated that I had come, as a voluntary apprentice,
 79    II,     XII|         or foe. That a time could come when the French would be
 80    II,     XII|             Why, of course, I had come for that; it was the opportunity
 81    II,    XIII|   prologue to the great battle to come, or else was part of a deep-laid
 82    II,    XIII|          fact is, you have always come back with a sound skin.
 83    II,    XIII|        alive, and death would not come to me without disgrace and
 84    II,     XIV|       Then tell her, monsieur has come home, and afterward see
 85    II,     XIV|        looked at her.~ ~"You have come away from the camp?" she
 86    II,     XIV|        for a considerable time to come. The Paris Bourse created
 87    II,      XV|        the winter-garden, and not come out of it in any case or
 88    II,      XV|        you want here? Why did you come out?" I asked her.~ ~She
 89    II,      XV|         money. "I wish they would come and tear me to pieces in
 90    II,     XVI|           of the fancied evil had come a certain good. "But if
 91    II,     XVI|          into the ocean; it would come back to me, like the ring
 92    II,     XVI|        was choking me.~ ~"Did you come from Paris alone?" asked
 93    II,     XVI|         it was in vain that I had come to this place to get rid
 94    II,    XVII|           at my command. She will come at my bidding. If every
 95    II,    XVII|           she must naturally have come to the conclusion that her
 96    II,    XVII|         present. Now the time has come when I may express my real
 97    II,    XVII|          his eyes; "if he had not come, these would not have come
 98    II,    XVII|        come, these would not have come either. So, you see, my
 99    II,    XVII|        the bed-curtains. "You may come to me," said Mr. Dumany,
100    II,    XVII|          confessional, and I have come home much happier than I
101    II,    XVII|           beautiful than this.~ ~"Come, my little one," said the
102    II,    XVII|        early yet for you to rise. Come to your little brothers
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