Part,  Chapter

 1 Note1         |         is now sixty-six years of age, having been born at Komárom,
 2 Note1         | profession but at twelve years of age the desire to write seized
 3 Note1         | manuscripts, and from that tender age to the present Jókai has
 4 Note1         |        successful volumes. At the age of twenty-three he laid
 5     I,       I|          she said, "No; until the age of three he could speak
 6     I,       I|          very nicely, but at that age he was thrown out of his
 7     I,       I|         in the same manner at the age of five, and could not speak
 8     I,       I|           in Euclid's adventurous age, when the Titans went into
 9     I,     III|         occurrence seemed such an age away that I should not have
10     I,     III|         in a child of such tender age some malady of the mind
11     I,      IV|          no jewellery at all. The age of the gentleman was, according
12     I,     VII|        patriotism in this decayed age, and the patriotic cause
13     I,     VII|    reality, I had already, at the age of six-and-twenty, occupied
14     I,    VIII|           prison I was just of an age to decide as to my future
15     I,    VIII|          ninety-seven now. A rare age, indeed! When last I saw
16     I,    VIII|     better than most others at my age. I am ninety-seven, as you
17     I,      IX|        living; nymphomania of old age; hypochondriacal fancies:
18     I,      IX|   inclinations pertaining to that age. But I had interpreted the
19     I,      IX|         you know a remedy for old age?" was his sarcastic inquiry.~ ~"
20     I,      IX|           may prove fatal at your age. I know that you are not
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