Part,  Chapter

 1     I,       I| conversation the little fellow had sat between us, mute, and, to
 2     I,       I|           and the shepherd himself sat beside it. I remember all
 3     I,      II|       heeded him?~ ~A young mother sat on the tracks, fondly hugging
 4     I,      II|  overpowered her reason. There she sat, caressing the woollen bundle,
 5     I,     III|           of phlegm and good sense sat down by the shepherd's fire,
 6     I,     III|        spot where the shepherd had sat, and began watching the
 7     I,       V|       pride! If our dependents had sat with the boy in a common
 8     I,       V|          and of the artist who had sat there among all the terrible
 9     I,      VI|    returned to me.~ ~He had hardly sat down, when the bed-curtains
10     I,      VI|           figures."~ ~Thereupon we sat down at the little tea-table.
11     I,       X|        Dead," an old gentleman who sat just in front of me, and
12     I,       X|         banished man passed out, I sat down on the seat he quitted. "
13    II,       I|        afterward.~ ~At the table I sat between Countess Diodora
14    II,      IV|         story, the two young girls sat down on a low bench beneath
15    II,      IV|      beneath a jasmine bush, and I sat down on the bowling-green
16    II,      VI|         expression "jumped," and I sat down to meditate over it. "
17    II,     VII|          Musinka, the dairy-wench, sat next to me, as became her
18    II,     VII|      bridesmaid. Next to the groom sat the priest, then Anyicska,
19    II,     VII|     damsels (the table was round), sat Baron Muckicza.~ ~We were
20    II,     VII|           in which Countess Flamma sat; the adjacent room was that
21    II,     VII|            of the sufferer. Flamma sat reading before the lamp
22    II,     VII|      entered the room in which she sat before a little table, her
23    II,    VIII|         remain so for life.~ ~As I sat before the mirror, looking
24    II,      IX|            two embroidered stools, sat the two girls, engaged in
25    II,       X|       before the writing-desk, she sat down and wrote on each of
26    II,     XIV|         would have none of it.~ ~I sat down and wrote an answer
27    II,      XV|           into the room in which I sat. I took that to be the normal
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