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1002 I, IX | enough ready money in his desk to pay his funeral expenses, 1003 II, XVII | of a woman who hates me, despises me, and scorns me, simply 1004 II, XI | start this evening for my destination."~ ~"If it is your wish, 1005 I, V | Rossberg catastrophe, or their destitute relatives. They shall at 1006 II, I | the side of the harmful destroyer against the innocent victim!~ ~ 1007 II, I | deadliest foe of the rose, destroying it entirely, and since my 1008 II, X | teachings would prove more destructive! Only, cool blood! Let me 1009 I, XII | have you to do with the details of the campaign? I am head-drummer, 1010 II, XVI | stay.~ ~At the border I was detained for exactly four hours. 1011 II, II | and met her eyes. Again I detected that bewildering cold glitter, 1012 II, XVI | streets no policeman, no detective could be seen. The National 1013 II, XI | boulevards, and the multitude of detectives among the people, gave us 1014 I, IX | century, and it has greatly deteriorated. But this money will help 1015 II, XIV | a phrase to express the detestation that filled me as I looked 1016 II, II | and tried to rival and dethrone the Almighty. It was after 1017 II, XIV | gunpowder, together with the detonations at the explosions, brings 1018 I, IX | that time. Later on the "Deuil d'Alsace" came out of Pandora' 1019 I, I | We are on the Rossberg. A devastated tract of the globe it seems. 1020 II, XVI | opportunity for watching the development of the situation, and the 1021 I, V | cried, "her self-sacrificing devotion, her pure, kind heart! She 1022 I, II | greedily thrusting upward to devour their prey.~ ~Then, as the 1023 I, VII | that the man had been a devout and religious Jew, incapable 1024 II, I | and my plan succeeded. The dew still glittered upon the 1025 I, II | and then, with cat-like dexterity and desperate daring, he 1026 I, I | to them in their various dialects with the same ease and fluency. 1027 II, III | among them, like a real diamond among coloured glass. Oh, 1028 II, IX | of her head as I spoke. Diana might have looked so at 1029 II, II | Herodotus tells us that he dies of the odour of roses. As 1030 II, VII | on the table. "Sacré de Dieu! This is treachery!" and 1031 II, XVI | sale, in order to pay his differences. His house cost him four 1032 I, IX | such an infernal odour is diffused by them. But if you would 1033 I, X | Vice-Governor, the same dignitary to whom I had given the 1034 I, VIII | of the family, for which dignity I had no inclination and 1035 II, I | bud of these 'Gloire de Dijons.' No! one of these 'Marshal 1036 II, IX | together, and her nostrils dilated. In looking at me her chin 1037 I, VIII | giving lessons, coaching less diligent and capable fellow-students, 1038 II, IV | of them was honestly and diligently engaged in some business.~ ~" 1039 I, XI | enumerates the contents of some dime museum - not of my uncle' 1040 II, III | yet it might be greatly diminished. The paroxysms might be 1041 I, IX | the cattle consisted of a diminutive black cow and her calf, 1042 I, XI | been furnished and the old dining-room made serviceable. He had 1043 I, XI | unanimously called "the Dioscuri," for we were never found 1044 I, I | were free from small-pox, diphtheritis, croup, measles, scarlet-fever, 1045 II, VIII | Cologne in the bowl of water, dipped a sponge into it, and washed 1046 I, III | shouts, and, turning in their direction, I observed that this title 1047 I, XI | commonplace a fellow not to disappoint them cruelly."~ ~"Vederemo!" 1048 I, IV | but still I was a little disappointed. I had half expected to 1049 II, I | asked Siegfried, with a disapproving look at my face. "My valet 1050 II, VIII | not belong to her; if he disbelieves in heiresses, he may believe 1051 I, VIII | and, besides that, I'll discard you - disinherit you!"~ ~" 1052 II, II | all four of them I clearly discerned and recognised the same 1053 II, XVII | father of a family should disclose such intimate secrets to 1054 II, XVII | me certain confidential disclosures. At that time I did not 1055 I, XIII | or twelve days after my discomfiture, and a beautiful afternoon. 1056 II, VII | protection in itself. Don't look disconcerted; you can come back. Our 1057 I, XIII | Countess Cenni will feel on discovering the mistake! She is a little 1058 I, VII | vote?"~ ~Somebody made the discovery that on the outskirts of 1059 II, XVII | self-denial, generosity, and discreet modesty, how my heart yearned 1060 I, XI | eccentricity. At other times he was discreetly prudent. He spoke almost 1061 I, III | of rails. The engineers discussed the best way in which a 1062 I, VI | were already present and discussing the question of Mr. Dumany' 1063 II, III | hostess, too.~ ~When the discussion approached the financial 1064 II, IX | personification of haughty disdain.~ ~"My dear doctor," she 1065 II, III | all! But you are proud and disdainful, I see. Perhaps you want 1066 I, XII | was sent home - a broken, disgraced, snuffed-out wretch - a 1067 II, XIII | God Mars to afford me a disguise for self-murder. "Why," 1068 I, XII | pork and potatoes, which disgusted me. I ceased to drink wine, 1069 II, XIV | my wife seemed perfectly disgusting, horrid, abominable! I cannot 1070 II, X | home at our own table; each dish an inviting delicacy, deliciously 1071 I, XIII | rock, and the enemy was disheartened and short of money, as the 1072 II, VII | ivory fingers were clutched, dishevelling them, tearing at them, in 1073 II, XV | me as an abject, greedy, dishonourable coward, a base wretch, who 1074 II, II | proper remedies: vaccination, disinfection, prophylactics; but an invisible, 1075 I, VIII | that, I'll discard you - disinherit you!"~ ~"I am very much 1076 I, IX | and if you, dear uncle, dislike our other relatives, and 1077 II, II | astonished and seemingly dismayed, "do you know that such 1078 II, XVII | can spare you altogether, dismiss you with good references, 1079 II, III | the treatment of nervous disorders, and that her case was by 1080 II, IX | Szepes-Váralja, to the bishop, for a dispensation, and, as soon as I am in 1081 II, XII | When the clouds of dust had dispersed, we saw that on the battle-field 1082 II, XVI | large tricolour flag was displayed; the military embraced and 1083 II, VII | studied anatomy, visited the dissecting-room regularly, and knows every 1084 II, XVII | What was I but a cunning dissembler, coming here to play a great 1085 II, VII | pathologico-psychological dissertation to explain how the process 1086 II, XVII | thou too, vile, wretched Dissimulation, I cast thee forth! Depart 1087 II, V | shooting-box. It will be a noisy, dissolute company that meets there, 1088 II, III | certainly very respectful and distant way; but of a real, true 1089 I, XI | you will have to take the distillery away from the lessee, for 1090 I, XI | course it is, clear and distinct."~ ~"Then I shall pay according 1091 II, X | Dearest, there is no such distinction existing! Since this blessed 1092 I, II | glows out again in fearful distinctness.~ ~Every one shrieks, cries, 1093 Note2 | In Part II, Chapter XII, "distinguised" has been changed to "distinguished".~ ~ 1094 II, VIII | you scarcely know how to distinguish between friend and foe. 1095 II, III | views of propriety were not distorted, you would apply for help 1096 II, II | disturbances of the mind; nervous distractions, diseases of the brain. 1097 II, II | given very much attention to disturbances of the mind; nervous distractions, 1098 II, XVI | I begged her pardon for disturbing her, but I thought she would 1099 I, IV | and from this topic we diverged to politics. He was a very 1100 I, XI | dissipation, enjoying the manifold diversions which the Austrian metropolis 1101 II, XIII | the Prussians, so as to divert their attention from the 1102 I, IX | therefore his sons were to divide his lands, goods, and chattels 1103 II, VII | Milo and found by this, her divine sister. The thick tresses 1104 I, XII | telegraphs you that some great division is coming on with respect 1105 I, XI | national reputation. Party divisions there were none; all parties 1106 I, XIII | composure, answered in Slav, "Dobri nocz, mladi panyicska," 1107 I, XI | because the Maticza has no documentary evidence, and so the court 1108 I, III | the Lord of Darkness and Doer of Mischief, whose might 1109 II, XVII | useful employments. You may dole out alms to the poor, and 1110 I, I | some waxen image or big doll.~ ~The lady seemed very 1111 I, IX | lapel of his long zrinyi dolmány (old-fashioned Hungarian 1112 II, I | was a mass of beautiful dolomite rock, a forerunner of the 1113 II, X | legal divorce? "Si fuerit dolus?" Had I not had enough of 1114 I, XIII | Cenni! Flamma!" The first domineering, imposing; the second with 1115 I, XI | their games of chess or dominoes. I was very cordially received, 1116 II, VII | spoiled game. I see the prima donna has thrown off her rôle, 1117 II, XVI | passed the frontier I had donned my uniform again, and was 1118 I, IX | this lock might try until Doomsday to force it open, and all 1119 I, VIII | went out without two loaded double-barrelled pistols in his boots. He 1120 II, III | become a nun, I had my strong doubts. True, she was religious, 1121 II, I | that the sea-turtle was no dove at all."~ ~"Hem!" said the 1122 II, VII | feeling. The bride, in a dove-coloured travelling-dress, with a 1123 II, V | She has no other money or dower but what Aunt Diodora will 1124 II, X | glance of her beautiful, downcast eyes. I had as yet never 1125 II, XV | put on my képi, and went downstairs.~ ~The porter had locked 1126 I, I | of it, and prepared for a doze.~ ~The guard came in to 1127 I, VI | have presented me such a draft that, in spite of all my 1128 I, IV | crying, in Hungarian, "Apám! Drága édes apám!" ("Papa! dear 1129 II, X | for her, and now she was dragging me down with her to eternal 1130 I, I | the tail of the great iron dragon. I have to cling tightly 1131 I, II | tearing at his flesh, as he drags her close to him. At last 1132 II, XV | she said, with a perfectly dramatic intonation and gesture, " 1133 I, V | beautiful heavy brocaded draperies, evidently veiling the entrance 1134 I, II | sketch.~ ~But this young draughtsman is not the only sensible 1135 II, XVII | she hastily concealed in a drawer a small and well-worn note-book. 1136 I, IX | chairs, mutilated chest of drawers, and coarse bed with bear-skin 1137 II, X | as I stepped nearer; and, drawing from the pocket of her dress 1138 II, XVII | him, and that she still draws a life-pension from the 1139 I, IX | horrible to dwell upon, yet dreadfully near. A single meal of some 1140 I, IX | seen, and assuredly never dreamed of. You see this large iron 1141 II, X | comfort.~ ~And then I had dreamt of the first supper we should 1142 II, XVII | of life, drain it to the dregs, and much good may it do 1143 I, IX | and Japanese, Sèvres and Dresden, old Hungarian, and so forth. 1144 I, IV | sitting-room, work-room, bed-, dressing-, and bathroom, all furnished 1145 II, IX | in a mauve-coloured silk dressing-gown, rested on a settee. Before 1146 I, I | parlour, a bedroom, and a dressing-room all to himself.~ ~I did 1147 I, VIII | a large pitcher for his drinking-water. This water he poured into 1148 II, I | surrounded with pines, their drooping foliage forming a shady 1149 I, II | loud and piercing that it drowned the clatter of stones, the 1150 II, VII | if you had saved me from drowning in an ocean of hot oil." 1151 I, VI | simpering, and tottered drowsily to and fro. He was evidently 1152 I, VI | indeed a surprise. All the drowsiness had entirely gone from me, 1153 I, VI | and that I looked rather drowsy. "You are tired," he said; " 1154 II, XVII | from accompanying them, to drug my wine at the table, and 1155 II, III | administering any poisonous drugs - simply by proper massage.~ ~" 1156 I, VII | gentlemen are leaders or drum-majors, and they have a number 1157 II, XII | commands. All at once a strange drumbeat was heard from beside us, 1158 I, VII | not vote?" added my chief drummer. "Beg pardon," said one 1159 II, VIII | it, and washed my face, drying it with a soft towel. "Oh, 1160 II, V | aspire to Diodora. In a duel you are not afraid of a 1161 II, X | ruffian and a notorious duellist. I am a bad shot and an 1162 I, X | of private quarrels and duels, but the concluding sentences 1163 II, XI | received my commission from the Duke of Palikao, and shall start 1164 I, XI | was two hours' drive from Dumányfalva. Siegfried drove me over, 1165 II, III | paroxysms might be reduced in duration and violence, and that without 1166 II, VI | prompted her, or - ? No, I durst not go farther - as yet - 1167 I, IX | Sultan Soliman.~ ~It was dusk, and the shadows of night 1168 I, IX | showed me all his treasures, dwelling upon the particular beauty 1169 I, IX | of King Albert, under the dynasty of the Mazures. Strong walls 1170 I, I | all my movements with an eager curiosity; the white little 1171 II, VII | Paphuntius with six gold eagles, and the vestry clerk was 1172 I, VII | that the offer had not come earlier, for how could a dying man 1173 I, IX | Yes, uncle," I said, earnestly, "and to ambition and independence, 1174 I, VIII | live decently upon your own earnings, I rather think that I may 1175 I, XI | precious old majolica as old earthenware, the suits of armour as 1176 II, VII | the fear of God leading to earthly happiness and eternal bliss. 1177 I, V | catastrophes, such as frequent earthquakes, great inundations, and 1178 I, VII | name in Jewish fashion, and eased his patriotic heart by voting 1179 II, VIII | wanting the light-headed, easily-deceived fellow for ourselves. But 1180 I, IV | from Zürich arrived at the Eastern Railway Station at seven 1181 II, III | flirtation; but all in an easy-going, although certainly very 1182 I, VIII | vegetables which might be eaten raw, and which grew in his 1183 II, VIII | and clean. I poured some eau de Cologne in the bowl of 1184 I, I | quick gesture and struck the ebony forehead with his tiny fist.~ ~ 1185 I, XI | sometimes high-spirited to eccentricity. At other times he was discreetly 1186 I, X | the "Maticza" (Slavic and ecclesiastical literary fund, employed 1187 II, XVI | said he, taking my hand. "Écrasant defeat of the contremine! 1188 II, XVI | me, and fairly went into ecstasies over me. Was this man mad?~ ~" 1189 II, XVII | admiration, of triumphant joy, of ecstatic delight.~ ~"True!" she said, " 1190 II, VII | the chapel, an old Gothic edifice, situated in a large clearing 1191 II, XVI | these are all afternoon editions. If you will wait till your 1192 II, III | intellectual, prudent, and well educated; and, finally, she must 1193 I, IV | throughout the world, and no education is considered as finished 1194 I, XII | patriotism, and religion had not effected, these few Hungarian words, 1195 I, VII | ivory, yet so great and effective were the persuasions of 1196 I, VIII | auctioning off some poor debtor's effects, he came into possession 1197 II, II | Rather a striking piece of egotism!~ ~"Do you know that the 1198 II, II | brains, or by some powerful egotistic motive, as jealousy, revenge, 1199 II, X | already. His wife lives in Egypt, and he cannot get a legal 1200 II, II | the holy scarabæus of the Egyptians?" asked Countess Diodora.~ ~" 1201 I, II | a low voice singing her "Eia Popeia" to the child of 1202 II, I | her movements had all the elasticity of youth and all the majesty 1203 I, VIII | our family - that is, the elder members - every one given 1204 I, IV | children. Little James is the eldest, of course?"~ ~"Yes, he 1205 I, VII | to me, and I was declared elected by a majority of one vote, 1206 I, VII | been buried two days before election-day by providing for the dead 1207 I, VII | my particular borough in election-time, he would not have omitted 1208 I, XII | business. Only, if some decent elector gets his head broken in 1209 I, XII | strong contest at the coming electoral struggle, and we Conservatives 1210 I, VI | was all ablaze with white electric lights, arranged like a 1211 II, VII | Periculum, in mora. Bring your electro-magnetic apparatus with you, and 1212 II, XVII | life. I took pride in the elegance of her toilette, and was 1213 II, III | future wife to be always elegant and stylish, and I should 1214 II, II | part of him, the material element, and it is superfluous to 1215 I, II | Awful is the voice of the elements, and dreadful their revenge 1216 II, VII | others an ostrich or an elephant. On this particular bottle 1217 II, XVI | storey. I took my wife to the elevator, to be carried to the room, 1218 II, VIII | bride of another man, to elope with me, it would have been 1219 II, XV | could be capable of such eloquence. "Citoyens!" she said, with 1220 II, VII | Cicero or a Demosthenes so eloquent as the pressure of a woman' 1221 | elsewhere 1222 I, II | unharmed, ran up and down the embankment, shouting madly for a rope, 1223 II, VII | mahogany bedstead. It was an embarras de richesses rarely met 1224 I, X | earnest, some in order to embarrass me, and the red-sashed parson 1225 I, XI | him in even a momentary embarrassment for money. When I first 1226 II, I | companion.~ ~"Tiens! Ca m'embête!"~ ~To her she spoke French; 1227 I, VII | for the mightier spirits, emblazoned on fifty and one hundred 1228 I, VII | opposing faction. My own party emblem was the red feather, that 1229 I, V | staffs, keys, and like emblems of rank and high station; 1230 II, IX | He even went so far as to embrace me. "God bless you, my dear - 1231 II, XVI | before the good man could emerge from the crowd. His silk 1232 I, I | bowels of the rock, and as it emerges it crosses another valley 1233 I, II | out, the whole form was emerging, when with a tremendous 1234 II, IV | general, that of all political emigrants they behaved best. They 1235 II, XVI | other day it had been an Empire. And all this had occurred 1236 II, XVII | virtue, honesty, and useful employments. You may dole out alms to 1237 I, XI | I could not sleep in my empty rooms, he carried me off 1238 I, XI | Maticza should not be left empty-handed, but should receive all 1239 II, I | across the flowery plain, emptying itself into the lake by 1240 I, IX | of modern times, and will enable you to keep up with the 1241 II, XVI | very liberal tip, was I enabled to procure a back room on 1242 II, II | tasteful, and delightful enamel-work I had ever seen, and all 1243 II, II | which a Chinese sun-bird was enamelled. The bird was only half 1244 I, V | expecting me in her own enchanting bower.~ ~The room which 1245 II, II | Diodora. "Their Devils are enchantingly handsome men, with pale 1246 I, II | and a red, glowing halo encircles the fatal wreck. The first 1247 I, II | his thumbs and wrists, and encircling his forehead. His forked 1248 I, VIII | well paid, I send you the enclosed bank-bill, and pray you 1249 I, IX | you this mansion, which encloses your treasure. Oh, the air 1250 I, VIII | please let me know, without enclosing money, for I should consider 1251 II, XIII | them all at their first encounter.~ ~Next day the Emperor 1252 II, X | bring you near me, and to encourage you to the proposal."~ ~ 1253 II, IX | so much so that I feel encouraged to lay the hidden secret 1254 II, XII | matter," said the old man, encouragingly. "You will get over your 1255 II, I | game I had.~ ~In vain we endeavour to bring high nobility and 1256 I, XI | Siegfried, indefatigable in his endeavours to be of use in me, assisted 1257 II, VIII | marvellously powerful man, and endowed with magical charms. I shall 1258 II, X | money to bribe me to the endurance of these hellish tortures!~ ~ 1259 I, X | what we wanted was honest, energetic co-operation for a common 1260 I, XIII | of nervous vitality and energy. Opposite to the verandah 1261 I, XII | to your country. You can engage a trustworthy man to manage 1262 II, XVI | thousand men. Yesterday's engagement had ended in a triumph for 1263 I, XIII | there would be no need of engaging any public restaurants or 1264 I, III | and the line of rails. The engineers discussed the best way in 1265 I, II | the puffing and blowing engines. The friction of the wheels 1266 II, X | me with vain conceit and enhanced my love for my executioner. 1267 I, IV | the station was still an enigma to me.~ ~At last we arrived 1268 II, XVII | beloved by his wife were to enlist against the Prussians, daring 1269 II, XI | French army in which I had enlisted as volunteer camp-surgeon. 1270 II, XVI | surrender values are rising enormously. You are a wonderful man! 1271 II, XVII | mistress of a King, and was enriched by him, and that she still 1272 I, IV | Bosnian policy. Of Tisza he entertained great hopes, and he felt 1273 I, XI | the opera or to private entertainments; but I was young and naturally 1274 II, XI | was built. When the public enthusiasm was highest, and the shouts " 1275 I, XIII | gipsy; the third bewitching, enticing, a flame! Oh, what a moth 1276 II, V | and the bride will sob and entreat you to take her away, protesting 1277 I, IX | to Vienna. I am afraid to entrust this letter to the mail, 1278 II, VII | ministrant waiting for us in the entry. Now they tolled the bell 1279 I, XI | I said. "This inventory enumerates the contents of some dime 1280 I, I | and all at once we are enveloped by a thick fog rising from 1281 II, XII | shots, for the cannon-smoke envelopes the surrounding objects 1282 II, III | phantoms the countess rather envied me, for Vernöcze could boast 1283 II, VII | skin is nothing to him but epidermis, stratum mucosum Malpighii; 1284 II, X | and glory should write my epitaph; and dead, I should be remembered 1285 II, VI | not catch, but the "dear" epithet I picked up; for it struck 1286 I, XII | vote of a dead man. The epithets "cheat," "deceiver," "liar," 1287 I, X | tendencies and in spite of modern equality.~ ~ ~ ~ 1288 II, I | difficulty in recognising the equestrian amateurs of the previous 1289 II, XVII | jealously careful that her equipage should outshine all others.~ ~ 1290 II, XI | military force is fully equipped, ready to begin hostilities, 1291 II, IV | that for me to go there is equivalent to imprisonment, possibly 1292 I, X | the room, and his name was erased from the list. This was 1293 II, VII | classical quotation "Ha, ich bin erkannt!" The bride shrieked, and, 1294 II, I | gardener, and send you on errands? Why did not you tell us 1295 II, IV | jealousy leads you into error."~ ~"Oh! Do you think we 1296 Note2 | following typographical errors in the original text have 1297 II, XII | his horse; but the third escapes unhurt, and cuts his way 1298 I, IV | He showed me a beautiful escritoire in the work-room, with everything 1299 I, V | addressed to the Hôtel d'Espagne," I said.~ ~"They have been 1300 II, VII | N.B. Dr. Cornelius Dumany, Esquire."~ ~The contents of the 1301 II, III | to be held in such high esteem, I could not have found 1302 I, IV | into fine cake, are equally esteemed by them.~ ~We talked about 1303 I, X | Pázmány, Prince Cardinal Esterházy, and Thomas Bakács, there 1304 I, VII | give anyone a fair or true estimate of me, or my character, 1305 I, XI | which the other things are estimated? For instance, your uncle' 1306 I, V | of that remarkable mutual estrangement between mother and child.~ ~ 1307 I, XI | in my bed and rubbed that eternally burning and smarting spot, 1308 I, III | happiness, and now sent to eternity together by such a fearful 1309 I, IV | another room I found a sort of ethnographical museum, full of relics and 1310 I, IX | past centuries - Roman and Etruscan, Chinese and Japanese, Sèvres 1311 I, I | Or was it laid down in Euclid's adventurous age, when 1312 I, IV | was sure to inundate the European market, yet Hungarian flour 1313 II, II | The poison," I said, evasively, "that gives the motive 1314 I, VII | tongues, and the aid of the ever-welcome angels. Tóth János the poultry-dealer, 1315 I, V | above their nests, among evergreen bushes and glorious flowers. 1316 I, III | not shameful? Is it not an everlasting stain and disgrace upon 1317 | Everyone 1318 II, II | do with any of these. All evil-doers, murderers, etc., are prompted 1319 II, I | that is, if we believe the evolutionists; but our friend here has 1320 I, I | this method I also knew examples of success. I was acquainted 1321 II, XVI | the police.~ ~For me this exasperating procedure was rendered more 1322 I, I | these languages she spoke excellently, and I am certain that if 1323 II, III | conspicuously kind, and showed me an exceptional preference - that is, she 1324 II, VII | bracelet, which Cenni had found exceptionally beautiful, and put it into 1325 II, XVI | Money Market? was not that excessively absurd?~ ~"It is easy to 1326 II, XI | naturally the centres of exciting scenes and noisy demonstrations; 1327 II, VII | the rhomboideus, made her exclaim, "Oh, that has done me good!" 1328 II, VII | hid her face in her hands, exclaiming, "Oh! what will you think 1329 I, II | a Pole, and the woman's exclamations were also uttered in the 1330 II, VI | day in the afternoon.~ ~My excuse was accepted, and I took 1331 I, V | and, without making my excuses to the lady, I silently 1332 II, VII | part of the treatment be executed by a woman?" she asked.~ ~" 1333 II, IV | yours. He is wanted by his executioners - that is, by the election 1334 II, VII | You are a Cagliostro, and exercise some powerful, mysterious 1335 I, XI | such was the fascination he exercised that I submitted at once.~ ~ 1336 I, XI | versatility in all bodily exercises, an unrivalled fencer, and 1337 II, XIV | business to risk his hide or exhibit sentiment. So they told 1338 I, VII | the body of the potter was exhumed, and his identity proved 1339 II, XVI | destroyed all calculations and expectations. That a tremendous decline 1340 II, VII | extended her hand. "Diodora expects you impatiently. She is 1341 I, XI | favour."~ ~"Then try to expedite the formalities. You can 1342 II, XII | in their great military expeditions; there their studies receive 1343 I, II | with which to hazard the experiment of descending. A young man, 1344 I, XII | departments represented by experts; what she wants at present 1345 II, I | were busy gesticulating, explaining, acting, and never at rest; 1346 I, XI | found the "doctor" more explanatory, and a good deal more to 1347 II, V | warning again, mid more explicitly, "Take care; they mean to 1348 II, XII | cylindrical projectiles, which explode as they alight, and scatter 1349 II, XIII | two millions are nicely exploded by this time." Underneath 1350 II, XII | impossible to prevent an exploding shell from sending its splinters 1351 II, XIV | with the detonations at the explosions, brings on the rain. The 1352 I, IV | talked about commerce and exports, and he observed that although 1353 II, XIV | My face was blackened by exposure to the sun and wind, and 1354 II, IX | witnesses."~ ~"Your ladyship expresses my own wishes."~ ~"If so, 1355 I, XI | not used to such strong expressions."~ ~"Oh, of course; I beg 1356 II, XI | palatial-looking house, exquisitely furnished, which had been 1357 I, IV | not think it necessary to extend them to her child. She breathed 1358 I, X | life in Hungary had been extinct, and now it had to be resuscitated. 1359 Note2 | Part II, Chapter XV, an extra "are" has been deleted from " 1360 I, VII | than liberally paid for extracting the poultry-dealer's front 1361 I, IV | man's name misused by the extreme faction. I tried to turn 1362 II, XVII | eyes, her attitude spoke of exultant admiration, of triumphant 1363 I, XIII | Something like joy, like exultation, filled me, that after all 1364 I, VIII | reading and writing without an eye-glass. Even his grafting he did 1365 I, III | shepherd, who had complacently eyed the scene as something that 1366 Note1 | manuscript of the author by Mme. F. Steinitz, who resides in 1367 I, II | crackling noise, the whole fabric shook and trembled, and 1368 II, I | large verandah to the east, facing the magnificent château. 1369 II, XI | treasures. Her priests would fail to console her, and she 1370 II, III | confess your mental and moral failings to a priest, although he 1371 I, V | exquisite scene, deeming that fairyland had opened to me, and that 1372 II, XII | wounded and nursed them faithfully, whether friend or foe. 1373 II, VI | trust and confidence, was a faithless deceiver; and my second 1374 II, XVII | virtue around my head was false.~ ~And she loved me! She 1375 I, IX | father had left me would be a falsehood. I was young, and not altogether 1376 II, XIV | hastily, but, on seeing me she faltered, and stood motionless at 1377 II, XI | protested against the ambitious, fame-hunting tyrants who drove their 1378 II, XVII | about my wife and me - the fantastic imagination of one half 1379 I, II | Popeia" to the child of her fantasy.~ ~An aged Polish Jew lay 1380 II, VII | benediction.~ ~It was a splendid farce, and admirably acted by 1381 I, VIII | germs. His land was all farmed out, and the rent had to 1382 I, IX | has all been leased out to farmers for many, many years, almost 1383 II, VI | or - ? No, I durst not go farther - as yet - only I knew now 1384 I, V | did not boast of them. No farthingaled, white-wigged ladies in 1385 II, VII | velvety, odorous flesh, the fascinating, peerless body, with his 1386 I, XI | dominate me. But such was the fascination he exercised that I submitted 1387 I, II | stones, the crackling of the fast-kindling coals, and the crushing 1388 I, VI | rightly remember, a rather fast-living bachelor, and rejected Commoner, 1389 II, I | laid upon the sill, and, fastening it in the button-hole of 1390 I, IV | disposal. If the excitement and fatigue of the journey should make 1391 I, IV | sleep at will; was never fatigued, and would with pleasure 1392 II, II | just made would prove the fatum of my life.~ ~As a physician, 1393 II, II | creation of Mephistopheles in Faust, and there he wore a goat' 1394 II, XVII | legitimatise the result of a faux pas. There is still a third 1395 II, V | showed an interest in my favourites, the roses, and turned to 1396 II, I | us, and one of the little fawns came almost under the wheels. 1397 I, XII | principle, strict party fealty. The demagogues, the heretics, 1398 II, XVII | he can keep the money. He fears for my life, because, in 1399 II, VII | course, accompanying us, to feast at the wedding banquet.~ ~ 1400 I, XIII | accusations of bribery, of feasting the voters, and so forth, 1401 II, X | thirsting for different feasts.~ ~And now this dream had 1402 I, VII | six o'clock p.m. the green feathers were one vote ahead of us. " 1403 II, VI | he is well lodged, well fed, well clad, and in excellent 1404 II, XVII | my own breast - a poor, feeble spirit, and long ago subdued 1405 I, IX | not look a bit older or feebler than you did ten years ago, 1406 II, VI | ur" - "Mr. Parasite." He feeds at every board, sleeps in 1407 II, XVII | justly entitled to those feelings; but you cannot wish me 1408 II, V | found in the despair of a fellow-being: you did not believe that 1409 II, XVII | imagination of one half of our fellow-creatures has invented so much to 1410 II, V | soon as you have left, the fellow-plotters will mount their horses, 1411 I, X | the Vice-Governor, and the fellow-student of whom I have spoken. But, 1412 I, VIII | less diligent and capable fellow-students, and contriving to live 1413 I, III | fortunate, wounded or maimed fellow-travellers up into the little watch-house.~ ~ 1414 II, I | extent. The whole park was fenced in with high iron railings, 1415 I, V | severely wounded by the ferocious reptile, yet he laughed 1416 II, V | room and I am with her, a festival banquet will be spread in 1417 I, XII | and the abolition of our feudal privileges. This is the 1418 II, XIV | powerful stimulant, good for fever and ague, hunger and thirst, 1419 I, IV | philosophy, history, poetry, and fiction - of the latter, only a 1420 II, IV | one of Verne's harmless fictions, in the adjoining sitting-room. 1421 II, VII | would take the ceremony bonâ fide, and play my part as naturally 1422 II, IV | consoling him with her love and fidelity. To this woman, who was 1423 II, II | stubby like that of a Slav field-labourer, and yet such a young lady 1424 I, XI | until all at once he saw the fiend's hoof appear from under 1425 II, XII | fire no balls, but some fiendish contrivances, longitudinal, 1426 I, III | average price of a goat?"~ ~"Fifteen francs."~ ~"Well, here is 1427 I, IX | embroidery and tapestry. The fifth room is a picture-gallery 1428 I, XI | florins, and sixty-four fifty-florin bills were found, flattened 1429 II, IV | that the girl cannot eat figs and candies in a year to 1430 I, VI | can never be expressed in figures."~ ~Thereupon we sat down 1431 II, IX | the sun darted through the filmy lace curtains; it was a " 1432 I, V | spoken to me with those finely-chiselled, ruby-coloured lips.~ ~" 1433 II, IX | the two girls, engaged in finishing the Japanese sunbird; and 1434 II, XII | their studies receive the finishing-touch, whereas the little skill 1435 I, I | and that, with the help of fire-eyed leviathans, we break through 1436 II, XII | from hearing the salutes fired on our King's birthday, 1437 I, I | and I have no doubt the fireman of the engine will thankfully 1438 II, XVII | want to be consumed by the fires of sinful love, nor to freeze 1439 I, VII | Parliament, I was politely but firmly given to understand that 1440 I, XII | she wants at present is firmness to principle, strict party 1441 I, IV | course?"~ ~"Yes, he is her first-born, and she is not yet twenty-four. 1442 I, XI | a third invited me on a fishing excursion, and so forth.~ ~ 1443 II, XVII | to all social amusements fitted to her station in life. 1444 I, I | Hungarian tongue, "Szegény fiúcska!" ("Poor little boy!") At 1445 I, III | the barricade, and great flakes of fire were flying about 1446 II, IV | return she is allowed to read Flammarion, or one of Verne's harmless 1447 II, XV | and veiled "ladies" in flashy dresses and with painted 1448 I, II | mass, the second crushed flat, while the third stood with 1449 I, XI | fifty-florin bills were found, flattened out, made into a package, 1450 I, XIII | game."~ ~I was dazzled, flattered, and surprised. What a difference 1451 II, II | as a simple, empty-headed flatterer. If, on the other hand, 1452 I, IV | people, and certainly used no flattery on the subject of our special 1453 II, XVII | bird's nest when one little fledgeling chirps all the rest join 1454 II, XVI | with soldiers and refugees fleeing from Paris, and at every 1455 II, III | carry on a little bit of flirtation; but all in an easy-going, 1456 II, I | kiss both? The smile that flitted over her queenly features 1457 II, XI | France. War was, so to speak, floating in the air, and was each 1458 I, V | Grotto of Capri. It was flooded with a magic blue light. 1459 II, XIII | Paris newspaper wrote a flourishing item about the heroic and 1460 I, XII | Vienna for very shame. A flouted, ridiculed man cannot be 1461 I, XI | surprised to hear what a flow of nonsense issues from 1462 I, VIII | secure rare specimens. His flower-garden was a real fairy bower, 1463 I, VIII | and the old man, with the flowing snow-white hair and beard, 1464 II, X | had to explain to her the fluctations of the market price in relation 1465 I, I | dialects with the same ease and fluency. Of her beauty I could not 1466 I, I | to talk intelligibly and fluently, could read aloud, and take 1467 I, XII | music and flags and all that flummery, and beg you to come and 1468 II, XI | had betrayed her and then flung her to me, I hated her, 1469 I, IV | complexion had a healthy flush, and he wore side whiskers, 1470 II, VII | with a loud noise, the wine foamed and sparkled in the glasses, 1471 I, VI | the child knelt in bed, folded his little hands, and evidently 1472 II, VII | covered up the fair sleeper, folding the blanket well on the 1473 II, I | with pines, their drooping foliage forming a shady roof above 1474 I, IX | not spoil me by too much fondness, and you would order my 1475 II, IV | carry them to the baptismal font, could not christen them 1476 I, XI | florins, and these you have fooled away. It will take months 1477 I, I | satisfied him that even the foot-and-mouth disease had by this time 1478 I, XII | built their pyramids on the foot-path; and the hedgehogs boldly 1479 I, VIII | to follow in my father's footsteps, for I saw that what with 1480 II, X | laughing-stock of every fop throughout the country? 1481 II, XVI | General Trochu expressly forbade soldiers to leave the country. 1482 II, XVII | to you. I shall even now forbear to reproach you. In this 1483 II, XIV | was burning already. I was forcibly struck by this proof of 1484 II, XVI | my man put the tip of his forefinger to his nose, and exclaimed: " 1485 II, XVI | have pulled out the devil's forelock and shaved off his beard, 1486 II, I | beautiful dolomite rock, a forerunner of the high mountains further 1487 II, XVI | same fate. It was easy to foresee the ensuing surrender, and 1488 I, X | blown to the winds, carrying forethought and resolution with them. 1489 II, XI | sequel of the war can be foretold with such certainty that 1490 I, XII | murderer, counterfeiter, or forger may procure a pardon, and 1491 II, III | spirit or courage, and never forgetting her position as hostess - 1492 II, XVII | me passionately. She had forgiven.~ ~ ~ ~After this we decided 1493 II, II | enough, but He is kind and forgiving, and the infidel may yet 1494 I, XI | the Vice-Governor. "But I forgot. Attached to the will was 1495 I, VII | with a lot of half-starved, forlorn-looking children, and a half-crazed, 1496 I, XI | Then try to expedite the formalities. You can do it."~ ~"I can' 1497 II, VII | Siegfried, notifying him formally of what I had done, and, 1498 I, II | down exhausted. Half-seen forms, mutilated, bleeding, were 1499 I, X | goods, and chattels should forthwith pass over to the "Maticza" ( 1500 II, XII | plantation is a terrible fortification, with its walls of vines 1501 II, XVI | good. He was posted behind fortifications, which were stored with 1502 I, X | often the case.~ ~About a fortnight after I had read of the 1503 II, XVI | returned to me doubled. Dame Fortuna insulted me! She was a demon - 1504 I, II | recommendation and leaped. Fortunately, I reached the ground, although 1505 I, V | destroyed the lives and fortunes of thousands upon thousands 1506 I, XI | seventy-nine florins and forty-five kreutzers. The kreutzers 1507 II, XI | cipher. Telegrams were to be forwarded through H - - 's Bank.~ ~ 1508 I, V | James's playfellow and foster-brother? Georgie's mother was James' 1509 II, II | without a visible motive are founded upon lunacy, a disorder 1510 II, XVII | live on, drink deep of the fountain of life, drain it to the 1511 II, VII | find out the cause, the fountain-head, of that significant partiality 1512 I, IV | hardly have been more than four-and-twenty, so young and girlish did 1513 I, IX | he continued, "there are fourteen hundred acres of ground 1514 II, VII | meinen Arm bieten, mein Fräulein," to which they answered 1515 I, II | the ground, but on a large fragment of rock, which pierced it 1516 I, V | and other blooming and fragrant vines intertwined. This 1517 II, XIII | wounded! Price of rentes, 1 franc 25."~ ~If this were true, 1518 II, XVII | I did not enter the Franc-tireur legion, although its captain 1519 II, XVII | confessed that love with the frank truthfulness of her nature - 1520 II, XVI | the military embraced and fraternised with the people. I saw the 1521 I, XII | may read of the horrible fraud that was practised in offering 1522 I, VIII | useless as blessings. The Frauenhofer lines tell us all the secrets 1523 II, VI | generous, large-hearted, noble, free-handed fool as your father was, 1524 II, XIV | Scientists say that the gas freed by the combustion of so 1525 I, XII | liar," and so forth were freely and frequently attached 1526 II, II | an infidel, a so-called Freethinker, and not a Christian?"~ ~ 1527 II, XIII | attack and disperse the French-Italian troops on their left wing, 1528 II, XVI | sitting near me, evidently a Frenchman, politely begged me to show 1529 I, IV | were covered with beautiful frescoes, betraying the French school 1530 II, X | bitter tears for me, and fret away her life in despair. 1531 I, II | and blowing engines. The friction of the wheels made a grating 1532 I, II | in my arms, but only from fright; otherwise he had received 1533 II, IV | says I am a libertine, a frivol viveur, etc., and she won' 1534 II, VIII | sweetly; the other for war, frowning and threatening, and clothed 1535 I, IX | exactly the same secluded and frugal way as his father, and to 1536 II, III | ladies were such forbidden fruit at present, why bring them 1537 II, X | for a legal divorce? "Si fuerit dolus?" Had I not had enough 1538 I, X | should stubbornly refuse to fulfil that condition, lands, goods, 1539 I, VII | unless the opportunity of fulfilling his patriotic duty was afforded 1540 II, IX | cock-crow. They all had capital fun. The Father had sung highly 1541 II, II | includes a denial of the fundamental truths of all religion also? 1542 II, VII | nothing! Only you look so funny with that gorilla beard 1543 I, VIII | what with his liberality in furnishing all patriotic enterprises 1544 I, II | up, covering him with a furred coat. I ran up the steps 1545 I, X | slowly rolling down the furrowed cheeks. "That is for the 1546 II, VII | sacrospinalis.~ ~What a fuss they make about that ascetic 1547 I, V | impossible for us, and afterward futile, she nodded. "I know it," 1548 I, V | this East Indian paradise, gaily-plumed, sweet-voiced birds of different 1549 II, VI | complacently pockets his gains. He never pays for the flowers 1550 I, XIII | tall of stature, regal in gait, a magnificent creature! 1551 II, III | has made no progress since Galen's time, and our most renowned 1552 I, XIII | Presently I heard the gallop of horses, and, looking 1553 II, XII | and in full uniform, had galloped into the heart of the French 1554 II, IV | portrait was nailed to the gallows.~ ~"The same high qualities 1555 II, V | friends; another is made to gamble until he either wins or 1556 II, VI | card-table, he is such a gambler. The fact is, he is on such 1557 II, I | squirrels, gray squirrels, gambolling among the boughs, playing 1558 II, VII | once. - SIEGFRIED."~ ~The gamekeeper had brought the letter, 1559 I, XI | other their whist, their games of chess or dominoes. I 1560 II, VII | and nerves reveals in the ganglia. A firm pressure of the 1561 II, XII | The shells made a fearful gap in the French horsemen, 1562 I, VII | potter was nick-named the "gap-toothed," because he had lost his 1563 I, XIII | released me with a "Merci, mon garçon!" and I, hardly able to 1564 I, VIII | to enter through a narrow garden-gate, just wide enough to admit 1565 I, XII | myself working away with garden-knife, shovel, and spade, pruning, 1566 II, VII | priest, then Anyicska, the garden-wench and second bridesmaid, and 1567 II, I | when I used to practise gardening at home, and was taught 1568 I, IV | thatch-roofed hut, with a garland of gourd blossoms around 1569 II, XIV | Scientists say that the gas freed by the combustion 1570 I, II | them.~ ~"Quick! quick!" gasped the man. "Take my necktie 1571 I, V | her breath came short and gasping. When I related how I had 1572 II, X | who had meant to enter the gates of paradise and found himself 1573 II, I | they busied themselves in gathering into their garden hats all 1574 II, XVI | which has developed into a gay butterfly, it had put on 1575 I, XI | speeches were rhetorical gems, yet they could hardly be 1576 II, VII | patient is of the neuter gender - just as the angels are."~ ~" 1577 II, XII | gash on his neck. "O, mon général!" sobbed the old soldier, 1578 I, IV | gallery you will find Munkácsy genres, Zichy aquarelles, a Benczur, 1579 I, VII | persuasive, only a little less gentlemanlike and less scrupulous, and 1580 II, XIV | bread and bacon - not a very gentlemanly appearance, by any means.~ ~" 1581 II, X | worthy of the high-born and gently-reared bride who was to inhabit 1582 I, V | simply as the outcome of geological and meteorological phases 1583 II, XI | which on the road through Germany were thrown in the way of 1584 II, VIII | both inserted the other day germinates and comes to bloom, deadly 1585 I, VIII | to kill possible malarial germs. His land was all farmed 1586 II, XV | against me with threatening gestures of all sorts of people, 1587 I, III | horrible picture looked ghastlier still, when, to our intense 1588 II, III | of real and respectable ghosts. These phantoms the countess 1589 II, XVI | oysters, woodcock, artichokes, giardinetto. Wines: Chablis, Chateau 1590 II, III | Here were three beautiful, gifted, high-born, and wealthy 1591 II, VII | Slavonic. They blushed and giggled a good deal, and did not 1592 I, I | old women carrying babies, giggling maidens, snoring or smoking 1593 I, XIII | touch of the Bohemian or the gipsy; the third bewitching, enticing, 1594 II, XV | The valet obeyed, and I girded on my sword again, put on 1595 I, VIII | beard flowed down to his girdle, and was the colour of hemp. 1596 I, XIII | haughtily in, while the little girl-rider cried out:~ ~"Tu y serais!" 1597 I, VI | plantation, as well as the 'gizr' spirit, obtained from the 1598 I, I | places with him, he would gladly repay his whole travelling 1599 I, III | he clapped his hands in gladness, and then, after a little 1600 I, XII | threw me such appealing glances that I was strongly tempted 1601 I, II | night was all aglow with the glaring light, and still those terrible 1602 II, XVII | his father, shouting with glee, climbing up into his lap, 1603 I, VII | long time, and they had glib tongues, and the aid of 1604 I, II | ran out.~ ~The train was gliding perpetually on, and I bethought 1605 I, II | a demon with a thousand glistening, sparkling eyes and tongues, 1606 II, I | succeeded. The dew still glittered upon the tender petals of 1607 II, I | cut me a bud of these 'Gloire de Dijons.' No! one of these ' 1608 I, XIII | glass of wine I felt the gloom vanish from me entirely. 1609 I, XIII | I confess that I felt a glow after reading these lines. 1610 I, II | in smoke and darkness, or glows out again in fearful distinctness.~ ~ 1611 I, II | them that a ridge of the Gnippe was crumbling, and would 1612 II, II | you read the Cabalists and Gnostics you will learn how sinful 1613 I, I | thrown out of his little goat-carriage, and in consequence of the 1614 I, XI | kreutzers were for an old Gobelin hanging - a rare piece of 1615 I, IX | Cellini was the owner of this goblet; and this sword was that 1616 I, IX | family, and I should be godfather to your son! Would not that 1617 I, I | What if the old Grecian gods should come to life? should 1618 II, II | the Devil in the opera, as Göthe and Gounod's creation of 1619 I, I | stately-looking negro servant, with gold-braided cap and overcoat of white 1620 II, I | eyebrows were dense, of a golden-brown, and arched over a pair 1621 II, XV | split in two."~ ~Most of the gommeux retreated at these words, 1622 I, I | governess."~ ~"Indeed!" My good-humour was rising still, and I 1623 II, III | she brightens up and is good-humoured and pleasant. When, the 1624 I, VIII | you are much too kind and good-natured to utter such stuff; and, 1625 I, II | and with its aid he made a good-sized breach, widening the opening 1626 I, IX | prospect of our mother's goodly store of money and other 1627 I, I | and twists itself like a Gordian knot; disappears and reappears, 1628 I, IV | a modern palace, and its gorgeous splendour has no charm for 1629 I, VIII | least use to you."~ ~"That's gospel truth. But as you are the 1630 I, I | Paris, I boarded the St. Gothard railway-train. Travellers 1631 II, VII | front of the chapel, an old Gothic edifice, situated in a large 1632 II, II | the opera, as Göthe and Gounod's creation of Mephistopheles 1633 I, IV | thatch-roofed hut, with a garland of gourd blossoms around its small 1634 II (4)| A governmental act of mercy in regard to 1635 I, VI | to be taken by the two Governments, the French and the Swiss, 1636 II, I | dark girl had a Nile-blue gown of some light material, 1637 I, IX | In the fourth room are gowns and trains and coats of 1638 II, IX | for obeying orders? So I graciously accepted my hush-money, 1639 I, I | recovered, and now he has graduated from college as senior wrangler."~ ~" 1640 I, V | subdue with their haughty grandeur the eyes of less high-born 1641 I, XI | building? Then there is the grange, the stable, etc., and then 1642 II, VII | alive who had ever been granted the privilege of seeing 1643 I, XII | carefully tended Isabella grapes wound their tender twigs 1644 II, I | stamped her little foot on the grass. "What are you paring the 1645 II, I | water, I heard steps on the gravel, and a musical voice cried -~ ~" 1646 II, XIII | battles at Bézonville and Gravelotte, Bazaine, with his force 1647 I, I | flowers meet for adorning graves. At the beginning of the 1648 II, I | twenty-acre park! Red squirrels, gray squirrels, gambolling among 1649 I, II | forehead. His forked beard and greasy side-locks dangled as he 1650 I, II | whose fiery tongues were greedily thrusting upward to devour 1651 II, XV | despised me as an abject, greedy, dishonourable coward, a 1652 I, X | up from his seat at the green-covered table, and as he turned 1653 II, I | blackbirds, nightingales, and greenfinches, chirruping and twittering, 1654 II, XI | night she would sigh and grieve. And in her dreams she would 1655 II, VIII | as a pretext for making grimaces, I cannot clearly detect 1656 I, VI | bed-curtains issued a heavy groaning, as if the little sleeper 1657 II, XII | accompaniment to the dying groans of the wounded. But the 1658 I, V | threw that peculiar, fairy, grotto-like hue over the little boudoir 1659 II, V | and you alone. At last, growing desperate, she will attempt 1660 II, IX | But if he is impertinent?" growled he.~ ~"Perhaps the count 1661 II, I | girl of twelve years, but a grown-up young lady, although, God 1662 I, VIII | roses, and he did not even grudge money to secure rare specimens. 1663 II, VII | without our host," said he, grumblingly. "But it is a pity. Such 1664 II, I | bellow, the wild boar's grunt, the squirrel's chatter, 1665 II, XI | mail, and under the usual guarantee, to a well-known banking 1666 II, XI | the inscriptions "À bas la guerre" and "Vive la paix!" Public 1667 II, XIII | detachment of Bavarian hussars, guessing at my intention, was there 1668 II, IX | the condition that if she, guided by whatever motive, should 1669 II, IX | far below me, and you were guiding me up to a strange world, 1670 I, IX | Praxiteles; this picture a Guido Reni; Benvenuto Cellini 1671 I, III | Whose sin was visited on the guileless heads of little infants 1672 II, XI | the tempting devil in the guise of a seraph! But I said 1673 II, XIII | sword-cuts, rifle-bullets, and gun-shots. "What an invaluable, brave 1674 II, XIII | Germans, and even the head gunner was severely wounded. I 1675 II, XIII | helmets and breastplates; the gunners cut the traces of the horses, 1676 II, XIII | scattered! Two hundred Krupp guns remaining as captures in 1677 II, XI | throw this money in the gutter?" said the man, eyeing me 1678 II, VII | answered in classic Slavonian, "Gyekujem peknye mladi-pan," which 1679 I, IV | do. He did not think the Gypsies the ruling race in Hungary, 1680 I, VI | I asked.~ ~He laughed. "Ha-ha-ha! Why, she is as good a Hungarian 1681 II, XVII | use of my keeping you?"~ ~"Ha-ha-ha-ha-ha!" laughed he. "Fancy your 1682 II, XVI | I saw the Imperial Guard hacking at the imperial eagle over 1683 I, XI | without being asked."~ ~"Hadn't you better use more civil 1684 I, X | independent with smooth hairless lips, and Thomas Nádasdy 1685 I, I | upon the little sofa of a half-coupé. It was not a very comfortable 1686 I, VII | forlorn-looking children, and a half-crazed, careworn, hard-working 1687 I, XI | here with my two cousins, half-grown young girls, staying until 1688 I, II | dropped down exhausted. Half-seen forms, mutilated, bleeding, 1689 I, VII | a poor Jew with a lot of half-starved, forlorn-looking children, 1690 I, IX | finished his last sentence. Hallucinations born of religious frenzy; 1691 I, I | backward and forward, and we halted for an extraordinarily long 1692 I, VI | cream and fresh and smoked ham, and sausages. This broth 1693 II, XII | presence of the awful Moloch, Hamoves, the angel with the scythe. 1694 II, XIII | it was a paper, and, on handing it over to me, Duval said, " 1695 II, XIV | dirty, blood-smeared cotton handkerchief around my forehead. My face 1696 II, XVI | Give me my percentage, and handle your money yourself."~ ~" 1697 II, XIII | you are!" he said to me, handling each of my charges with 1698 II, II | has to be but one shade handsomer than the Devil, for women 1699 II, IX | smooth face, I was a much handsomer-looking fellow than last night, 1700 I, IX | flatter you, and bring their handsomest daughters for you to choose 1701 II, XIII | of life, take a rope and hang yourself on that willow, 1702 I, VI | Hungarian flag. The beautiful hanging-lamp shed a green light, the 1703 I, VII | There is indeed, and he happens to live in the same house 1704 II, XVII | said -~ ~"Sir, you are the happiest man on earth, nor can all 1705 I, VII | a half-crazed, careworn, hard-working wife. The husband and father 1706 I, XI | and nothing so tough and hardened as you. Come, friend Kornel! 1707 II, I | girl taking the side of the harmful destroyer against the innocent 1708 II, III | politics our views were harmonious. I had the same Conservative 1709 I, XI | none; all parties agreed harmoniously, and played with each other 1710 I, I | him that we had caught and harnessed his heavenly lightning to 1711 II, VIII | but she laughed a short, harsh laugh, and continued -~ ~" 1712 II, XII | with the coolness of the harvester when he hastens to save 1713 II, XVII | Lilith, the dark-skinned Hashor, the almond-eyed Anaitio, 1714 II, IX | will give me leave I shall hasten to Szepes-Váralja, to the 1715 II, XII | of the harvester when he hastens to save his crops from the 1716 II, XVI | my Hell-born millions had hatched again, and returned to me 1717 II, XVI | not like that, for it kept hatching, and came back like a hen 1718 II, XVI | determined that this time the hateful money should be lost for 1719 II, XVII | I am no stone! Avaunt, Hathor, Mylitta, Baaltis, I am 1720 I, XIII | nearer to the gate and looked haughtily in, while the little girl-rider 1721 I, VIII | examining each stalk or haulm she ate, in order that no 1722 II, IV | that time the favourite haunt of the Hungarian refugees. 1723 I, XI | buy cattle, and grain, and hay, and a good many other necessaries, 1724 I, II | rope or cord with which to hazard the experiment of descending. 1725 I, I | breaks through the dark haze. Once again the iron serpent 1726 II, I | playing with acorns and hazelnuts; thrushes, blackbirds, nightingales, 1727 I, XII | details of the campaign? I am head-drummer, manager of the canvass. 1728 II, III | of the coming elections, head-drummers, and subalterns swarmed 1729 II, X | them, and yet I had plunged headlong into the abyss which they 1730 II, VII | tormenting executioner, not a healing physician, to the sufferer. 1731 II, III | soon as she sees you or hears your voice, she brightens 1732 II, I | and wooden shutters with heart-shaped perforations on the outside. 1733 I, II | nerve of my body, every heart-string, revolted at it. Even now 1734 II, XVII | beings. You will become a heartless libertine, a selfish sensualist. 1735 I, V | at the most fearful and heartrending point, her soft, dimpled 1736 I, III | senseless.~ ~By this time the heat was so oppressive that it 1737 I, V | not observed by anybody, I heaved a sigh and said, 'God bless 1738 II, VII | the silken coils fell down heavily to the carpet, and another 1739 II, XIII | such imminent danger for - Hecuba - that is, for wounded French 1740 II, I | overrun with henna leaves, hedge-plant, and other creepers. Out 1741 I, XII | on the foot-path; and the hedgehogs boldly invaded the lawn 1742 II, VII | nervous attacks, but I did not heed that. My step was as firm 1743 I, II | to make a rope!" But who heeded him?~ ~A young mother sat 1744 I, I | wants to give the German Heinicke method a trial. That professes 1745 I, III | fearful punishment? What heinous crime had they committed 1746 II, XIII | Emperor himself and his young heir-apparent appeared among us, presenting 1747 I, VIII | left to bequeath to your heirs. So I am not afraid of that 1748 I, I | were told of America? If Helios Apollo could listen to Wagner' 1749 I, XII | a letter, perfumed with heliotrope, handed it to me.~ ~"My 1750 II, XVI | readily understood.~ ~So my Hell-born millions had hatched again, 1751 II, XIII | rifles, the cuirassiers their helmets and breastplates; the gunners 1752 II, X | stood there and looked on in helpless despair.~ ~At last there 1753 II, I | was no dove at all."~ ~"Hem!" said the little one, looking 1754 II, XVI | already knew that MacMahon was hemmed in, and that the Emperor 1755 II, XVI | winking and smiling and hemming, and I did not think it 1756 I, VIII | girdle, and was the colour of hemp. His eyes were as sharp 1757 II, XVI | hatching, and came back like a hen with a brood of chickens - 1758 II, I | was a grotto, overrun with henna leaves, hedge-plant, and 1759 II, II | them of the South American Hercules-beetle, that is as fond of liquor 1760 I, VIII | garden. Out of his large herd of cattle he selected a 1761 I, XII | fealty. The demagogues, the heretics, and the Panslavonians of 1762 II, XVII | have asked you for mercy heretofore. I now ask you for justice; 1763 II, IX | not speaking of the park hermitage. We have a chapel here in 1764 I, IX | spot, like one of those hermits of bygone times, living 1765 I, X | glorious, never-to-be-forgotten hero-king, wore a clean-shaven face 1766 II, II | and of the holy scarabæus Herodotus tells us that he dies of 1767 II, XII | them.~ ~The French fought heroically against the crushing superiority 1768 I, XII | could speak or write in hexameters, in such verses I would 1769 I, I | the mountain, now plays hide-and-seek among the peaks. A high 1770 II, XVII | you have thrown off the hideous mask you wore, have shown 1771 I, IX | a princely seat, and it hides treasures that monarchs 1772 I, X | that the great national high-priests and patriots, Peter Pázmány, 1773 II, I | Dumanyfalva to Vernöcze the high-road makes a circuit of a two 1774 I, XI | and slew. He was sometimes high-spirited to eccentricity. At other 1775 II, XII | person, was dashing from the hills to meet them. The strong 1776 II, XVI | doing so. All those who had hindered me when leaving the country 1777 II, VII | and secure your hair; it hinders my movements."~ ~She obeyed; 1778 II, XV | Someone has given them a hint, and they have taken it 1779 II, XVII | horse-tamer in the Paris Hippodrome, and they say that he is 1780 II, VI | have begun, old Diogenes's hoard will go after your father' 1781 II, XII | said the dying chief, hoarsely. "Go shout to them 'En avant!' 1782 II, XII | least danger for us. We hoist the Geneva flag with its 1783 I, XI | informed at what time the court holds its session; they have to 1784 I, IX | finds me in my dingy little hole of a room, which, with an 1785 II, XVII | henceforth be kept as a high holiday, as this little darling' 1786 II, X | and dependence upon our homes and us."~ ~"So it was all 1787 I, V | handed me a copy of the Hon.~ ~"But I had them addressed 1788 II, IV | work. Every one of them was honestly and diligently engaged in 1789 I, VIII | on baked potatoes, nuts, honey, raw fresh eggs, and all 1790 I, V | some kind of bower, with honeysuckle, woodbine, and other blooming 1791 I, VI | comes from my own garden in Hong Kong. The mandarin is decocted 1792 II, XVII | creditable in a man when he lives honourably by means of his ability 1793 II, XIV | was a rubber cloak with a hood, while on my feet were a 1794 II, X | cunning and wicked as their hoofed and horned idol; and we 1795 I, V | white-wigged ladies in hooped skirts and trailing brocade 1796 II, III | her case was by no means hopeless. That although it was impossible 1797 II, XII | superiority of the Germans, vainly hoping that the report of the cannonade 1798 I, V | and colour were chirping, hopping, and hovering above their 1799 II, II | monster, with a pair of big horns on his forehead. Then, again, 1800 II, XV | bugle, then the clatter of horse-hoofs; the Imperial Guard itself 1801 I, VIII | it, and a thick growth of horse-sorrel, both without and within 1802 II, XVII | position. He is engaged as horse-tamer in the Paris Hippodrome, 1803 II, XII | fearful gap in the French horsemen, but still they dashed bravely 1804 II, V | Mamma thanked me for the horticultural lesson I had given her, 1805 II, V | anyhow, so she might take to horticulture meanwhile.~ ~When the whole 1806 I, VII | it much more prudent and hospitable to serve the liquid to others 1807 II, XIII | found my way to the camp hospital.~ ~What a cursed, vile task 1808 II, XII | beds, and take them to our hospital-tents for treatment."~ ~This had 1809 II, XI | utensils requisite for camp hospitals, and then, under the protecting 1810 II, XI | equipped, ready to begin hostilities, and stationed at the Rhone, 1811 I, VIII | trip."~ ~"Good God! what a hot-tempered fellow, and what admirable 1812 I, V | had them addressed to the Hôtel d'Espagne," I said.~ ~"They 1813 I, XII | made a bargain with every hotel-keeper or inn-keeper in the whole 1814 II, XVI | find a lodging. All the hotels were crowded to the doors, 1815 II, IV | trick on one of our English Hotspurs. Of you I know that you 1816 II, XVII | conduct after our marriage hourly convinced me of the correctness 1817 I, IV | beautiful little girls - quite a houseful."~ ~"But the lady looks 1818 I, V | were chirping, hopping, and hovering above their nests, among 1819 I, VII | and children broke into a howl of despair that the offer 1820 II, XV | with painted cheeks, all huddled pell-mell in picturesque 1821 I, VI | a tricolour of the same hues as the Hungarian flag. The 1822 II, VI | Vice-Governor embraced, nay, fairly hugged me in his arms. "My dear 1823 I, II | sat on the tracks, fondly hugging a plaid shawl in her arms. 1824 II, XIV | The valet was a very humane and obliging fellow. He 1825 I, VIII | for he called them all humbugs; and he never gave a penny 1826 II, V | degrade, socially and morally humiliate you, and then laugh you 1827 II, IV | of two hours' standing, humiliated, stunned, without money, 1828 I, IX | into the church? Not out of humility, but because at present 1829 II, VII | We were in excellent humour and rather hilarious, and 1830 I, XI | know they may be full of hundred- or even thousand-florin 1831 I, VIII | Dion, with an old, crumpled hundred-florin bill, of a kind that had 1832 II, XIV | good for fever and ague, hunger and thirst, influenza-cold, 1833 I, X | your moustache?"~ ~"Out hunting for yours, your reverence," 1834 I, II | rescuing them. It was a wild hurly-burly of voices and of tongues, 1835 II, VII | Now they tolled the bell hurriedly and briefly, and gave way 1836 II, I | two beautiful young girls hurrying toward me. One of them, 1837 II, IX | I graciously accepted my hush-money, which was less subtle and 1838 I, XII | have the descendants of the Hussites dominate Hungary? Are you 1839 I, IV | or even a thatch-roofed hut, with a garland of gourd 1840 I, XI | I was indignant. "It is hyper-barbarism!" I said. "This inventory 1841 II, X | precision characteristic of hypnotised persons. She stood there 1842 I, VIII | next year."~ ~"Oh! you are hypochondriac, I see, and give way to 1843 I, IX | nymphomania of old age; hypochondriacal fancies: all symptoms that 1844 II, XVII | condemnation of my base hypocrisy. What was I but a cunning 1845 II, IX | Diodora explained, laughing hysterically, that their dear, common 1846 II, VII | envelope the inscription, "Ibi, ubi, cito, citissime. N.B. 1847 II, VI | indoors to partake of some iced coffee, and strawberries 1848 I, I | mist which surrounded the icy pinnacles of the great mountains, 1849 I, IX | till your acres after the ideas you will get from the text-books; 1850 I, IX | born of religious frenzy; idiosyncrasies with allotriophagical symptoms, 1851 II, I | upon the altar of national idiosyncrasy. Henceforth he will be known 1852 II, X | confession was the truth? Like an idiot or a lunatic I stared, gazing 1853 II, XVII | invented so much to feed the idle curiosity of the other half, 1854 II, XIII | course, each corps was in ignorance as to the fate of the others, 1855 I, X | language they supposed me ignorant. The nobleman said to the 1856 II, VII | German phrase, "Darf ich Ihnen meinen Arm bieten, mein 1857 I, II | the erect position of the ill-fated pile, the topmost car - 1858 II, XVII | and beget unfortunate, ill-starred beings. You will become 1859 II, XVI | his legal wife, another illegal wife, or mistress; and as 1860 I, X | mine. The famous Palatinus Illésházy had pronounced Hungary free 1861 II, XVII | at a time when a slight illness had prevented me from accompanying 1862 II, XII | French awoke from their illusion, and recognised them as 1863 I, II | the sensational scene. The illustrated papers are grateful customers, 1864 I, XI | you provide for them? Qu'ils attendent, les pauvres bêtes; 1865 II, II | altars to him, and set up his images with many ceremonies. The 1866 II, XVII | wife and me - the fantastic imagination of one half of our fellow-creatures 1867 I, VI | fictitious combination. I had imagined that my countryman had won 1868 I, XI | police. If you are such an imbecile, and really do not care 1869 I, I | field of huge boulders, imbedded in snow and ice, the Alpine 1870 I, VI | speaks French, she only imitates our ladies at home, who 1871 II, II | prophylactics; but an invisible, immaterial spirit, which we ought to 1872 II, XIII | foreigner, took the risk of such imminent danger for - Hecuba - that 1873 I, X | the Hungarian tricolour to immortal triumphs although his face 1874 II, XII | craved, the chance for the immortalising cannon-ball to send me up 1875 II, IX | physician I knew that it impaired the health of a nervous 1876 II, VIII | myself always show an honest impartiality to friend or foe."~ ~"Oh, 1877 II, XI | admirers the more ardent and impassioned is their love for her. In 1878 II, XIV | But I did not show any impatience to get at the contents of 1879 I, II | train had met with some impediment. I heard the jolting of 1880 II, VII | Siegfried looked at them, and imperatively motioned to the door. They 1881 I, IX | deer-park, and the other half is imperfectly cultivated. Look at the 1882 II, IX | replied to the countess's imperious inquiries -~ ~"Lady Flamma."~ ~" 1883 I, III | firemen with their manifold implements, police, and all kinds of 1884 II, VII | of me?" and to Siegfried, imploringly, "Pray let me go back to 1885 I, XIII | The first domineering, imposing; the second with a touch 1886 I, II | hell, and maddened at the impossibility of rescuing them. It was 1887 II, VIII | hope and joy. This girl's impotent jealousy had convinced me 1888 II, VII | Paphuntius delivered a very impressive sermon on domestic virtues 1889 I, VIII | Világos he was seized and imprisoned at Olmütz. At that time 1890 II, IV | go there is equivalent to imprisonment, possibly death?'~ ~"'I 1891 I, IX | this money will help you to improve the soil also, and it will 1892 I, VIII | you for? But none of your impudence, if you please!"~ ~I was 1893 II, X | an instant I felt a mad impulse to rush after her, and with 1894 II, IX | request which you seem to impute to me; I simply beg leave 1895 II, XVI | experienced a few years of tedious inaction at Mainz or some other German 1896 I, X | that it was not a time to inaugurate a policy of jealousy and 1897 II, XI | curse will reach me, no incantation of conjurers or spirit-rappers 1898 I, XI | or either of them, is an incarnation of the Evil One? Or are 1899 II, VIII | tongue of a jealous woman incense me against an angel like 1900 I, X | take my patients from me by incensing them against me in every 1901 II, V | first place, a T-shaped incision has to be made on the stock, 1902 II, II | know that such a negation includes a denial of the fundamental 1903 I, I | that I was not in the least incommoded, and only regretted that 1904 II, I | shoots and removing the inconvenient thorns. Just as I had taken 1905 I, I | bankruptcy?~ ~The train increases its speed to regain the 1906 II, XI | crops the heavy debts I had incurred. All day she would pine 1907 II, XVII | my heart. For to him I am indebted for all my present happiness; 1908 I, VII | and zealous party members, indefatigably busy in securing and collecting 1909 II, XVI | moist copy of the morning Indépendance were before me. The price 1910 II, XII | All this while I felt that indescribable intoxication which is sure 1911 I, V | trees; and in this East Indian paradise, gaily-plumed, 1912 I, XI | said Siegfried; but I was indignant. "It is hyper-barbarism!" 1913 I, II | writhing, and cursing. I ask indignantly, "What do you want with 1914 II, VI | first.~ ~We were called indoors to partake of some iced 1915 I, VIII | hundred florins will not induce me to leave my patients, 1916 I, XI | belonging to the occasion, I was inducted into my legal rights as 1917 I, XIII | patience,' and secretly indulging in a sip. My aunt is but 1918 II, II | fancy for them, but for industrial purposes. This changed my 1919 I, XI | I had lived soberly and industriously up to this time, rarely 1920 I, II | approaching, and a collision inevitable? I could see nothing, but 1921 II, X | disgrace, bribed for my infamy with money!~ ~Great Jehovah, 1922 I, III | guileless heads of little infants and innocent children who 1923 I, IX | while I became strangely infatuated with the old man and his 1924 II, IX | why that look failed to infect me as it had Ixion? Because 1925 II, II | inherited or fancied maladies, infections, contagions, and their proper 1926 I, I | his baths, besides several inferior servants. These all occupied 1927 I, XII | her to become a prey to infidels, or Panslavonic conspirators, 1928 II, X | will forgive you, for He is infinitely good and merciful; but if 1929 II, II | being exists which would inflict sorrow on others just in 1930 I, XIII | champion of our party, and very influential, too. Besides, she was very 1931 II, XIV | ague, hunger and thirst, influenza-cold, and, yes, the tremor before 1932 II, VI | what motive had she in informing me that the million of florins 1933 I, VIII | you can't, for our present ingenious Government takes precious 1934 II, X | gently-reared bride who was to inhabit it; and I thought what joy 1935 I, VIII | than they. Not the oldest inhabitant remembered the time when 1936 I, IX | coverlet, looks poor and inhospitable enough, and my visitors 1937 II, IV | and too noble withal to injure a woman. So good-bye to 1938 II, I | cetonia?"~ ~"Because it injures the roses," I said.~ ~"Well, 1939 I, V | in consequence of their injuries? Who were they? Of what 1940 I, XIII | them in my hand for fear of injuring them.~ ~So the Valkyrs were 1941 II, XVII | emotions which might be injurious. I have nursed you conscientiously, 1942 I, IX | all this seeming spite and injustice was really a token of his 1943 II, X | soon. She asked for pen and ink, and, as I got up from the 1944 I, X | war has its origin in an inkstand, students are, naturally, 1945 I, IX | furniture of costly woods, inlaid with ivory, mother-of-pearl, 1946 I, VI | become the possessor of his innumerable millions. Mr. Dumany might 1947 II, VI | had taught Flamma how to inoculate I had involuntarily and 1948 II, V | at all by this lesson on inoculating?" he asked the girl, and 1949 II, V | teaching me the process of inoculation? I am greatly interested 1950 II, IX | the countess's imperious inquiries -~ ~"Lady Flamma."~ ~"Yes, 1951 II, II | kind of poison?" was the inquiring response, given with great 1952 I, IX | age?" was his sarcastic inquiry.~ ~"I do, to grow older 1953 I, VIII | you dare to follow such an insane course, you may be sure 1954 II, II | with the symptoms of actual insanity, others in which it is mistaken 1955 II, VII | and on the envelope the inscription, "Ibi, ubi, cito, citissime. 1956 II, XI | flags and signs with the inscriptions "À bas la guerre" and "Vive 1957 II, VII | explain how the process of inserting a rose-scion into a stock 1958 II, XVII | life, the honour, of an insignificant fool like myself. Move over, 1959 I, IV | you trouble. Look! If you insist upon going to some hotel, 1960 I, XI | But I do mind it," I insisted. "I can't have something 1961 I, XI | the mountains, another to inspect his model farm and dairy, 1962 I, VIII | cannot be proved by optical inspection or by evidence. It was, 1963 II, IX | gracious words at this moment inspire me with boldness; so much 1964 II, X | that the reason for his instantaneous proffer of friendship?"~ ~" 1965 II, XVI | You do with my money as I instruct you. Put all the money left, 1966 II, IV | as much increased by some instrument as your vision by the telescope, 1967 II, XVII | against you, caused you insufferable pains, infinite tortures; 1968 II, II | takes his revenge on the insulter."~ ~I looked up astonished 1969 II, XVII | The effect of my cruel, insulting words were marvellous. They 1970 II, XVI | that was a veritable life insurance corps.~ ~I could not get 1971 I, VIII | Of course, in the great insurrection of the year 1848 he took 1972 II, III | Diodora's philosophical intellect impressed me as much as 1973 I, I | who had learned to talk intelligibly and fluently, could read 1974 II, IV | with which he had frequent intercourse was one in which there was 1975 II, I | obey. I had no right to interfere, as these cetonias do not 1976 I, XI | Devil is never at rest!"~ ~INTERMEZZO.~ ~The Devil?~ ~"Do you 1977 II, VII | dry, and the pulse beat intermittently. When I laid my hand on 1978 II, III | that in the treatment of internal maladies medical science 1979 I, IX | pertaining to that age. But I had interpreted the true spirit of my father' 1980 I, IV | able to stare at you or interrogate you, and you shall live 1981 I, III | watchmen and travellers were interrogated by officials. Ropes and 1982 II, X | the appearance of such an interrogatory as a magnetiser would address 1983 I, V | blooming and fragrant vines intertwined. This bower was prolonged 1984 I, IV | pester you day and night with interviews, besides the reporters of 1985 I, IV | papers will be full of your intimations, although you do not say 1986 I, XII | of bribery, corruption, intimidation, and similar crimes committed 1987 II, XV | with a perfectly dramatic intonation and gesture, "you are mistaken 1988 II, XII | felt that indescribable intoxication which is sure to overtake 1989 I, XI | in upon you unawares, and introducing themselves. They are positively 1990 II, XIV | look, who had unexpectedly intruded into the house, to enter 1991 I, IV | American wheat was sure to inundate the European market, yet 1992 I, V | frequent earthquakes, great inundations, and similar unfortunate 1993 I, XII | and the hedgehogs boldly invaded the lawn as I passed. As 1994 II, XI | transport and that of the invalids, furnished myself with all 1995 II, XIII | and gun-shots. "What an invaluable, brave fellow you are!" 1996 II, IV | and, after the Russian invasion, and the final overthrow 1997 II, III | true to the letter. I shall invent nothing."~ ~ ~ ~ 1998 II, XVII | our fellow-creatures has invented so much to feed the idle 1999 I, IX | safer than any of your new inventions? Come, let me show you how 2000 II, XVI | millions! Your money is all invested for a rise. To-day we shall 2001 II, VII | nearly two campaigns, such an invigorating of the system is very commendable.~ ~


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