Part,  Chapter

 1     I,     VII| adversary the green feather; the national cockade we sported in common.~ ~
 2     I,       X|         suffering, the Hungarian national spirit was first allowed
 3     I,       X|         celebrated heroes of our national history, I gave them then
 4     I,       X|         told them that the great national high-priests and patriots,
 5     I,      XI|       one or two great lights of national reputation. Party divisions
 6    II,       I|      sacrifice upon the altar of national idiosyncrasy. Henceforth
 7    II,      IV|          heroic defenders of the national cause, and his great personal
 8    II,      IV|       had brought me. During our national struggle for liberty in
 9    II,      IV|       the final overthrow of the national cause, he made good his
10    II,    VIII|       Good-bye to Chauvinism and national peculiarity! I wanted a
11    II,      IX|          and a soldier under the national tricolour at Mount Thabor,
12    II,    XIII|         had regarded their great national calamity as a means of carrying
13    II,    XIII|          you suppose these great national conflagrations are kindled
14    II,     XVI|     detective could be seen. The National Guard watched over the public
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