Part,  Chapter

 1     I,       I|        is impatient, and he has sent the boy to all the deaf-and-dumb
 2     I,     III|     life and happiness, and now sent to eternity together by
 3     I,      IV|        was lucky enough to have sent my luggage one day ahead
 4     I,      IV|        two dinner invitations I sent out this morning."~ ~"Certainly,"
 5     I,      VI|       father, just as before we sent him to the Institute."~ ~
 6     I,     VII|         the poultry-dealer, was sent for, but his voting in his
 7     I,     VII|       János, the potter. We had sent his substitute, the poultry-dealer,
 8     I,     XII|         the election, and I was sent home - a broken, disgraced,
 9    II,      XI|       with my wife's dowry, and sent it by mail, and under the
10    II,      XI|      the money my solicitor had sent me, and when they inquired
11    II,      XI|        the banker to whom I had sent Flamma's million. I opened
12    II,      XI|    funds which my solicitor had sent me, amounted to two millions
13    II,     XII|      messages of death were not sent to them, but to the French
14    II,    XIII|     line of fire. The Bavarians sent another shrapnell shell
15    II,      XV| mistaken. The valet, whom I had sent to the post-office to mail
16    II,    XVII|      confessed it in words that sent a thrill of delight through
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