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3002 II, VIII | jesting; and listen to me, or repent it until your dying hour! 3003 I, IV | and read the letters, and, replacing them again on the silver 3004 I, IX | order to spend his income in replenishing his collection of rarities. 3005 I, VI | those wild, fanciful stories reported by gossiping American newspapers."~ ~ 3006 I, X | walls of the room, portraits representing the most celebrated heroes 3007 II, XVII | shall even now forbear to reproach you. In this whole baneful 3008 I, V | wounded by the ferocious reptile, yet he laughed at his pains."~ ~ 3009 II, XVI | with the legend "Vive la République!"~ ~So it was already a 3010 II, III | never marry at all. She repudiated the very idea of marriage, 3011 I, V | others. This made the child repugnant to the mother, and, no doubt, 3012 I, XII | for two or three weeks is repulsive to me. It is entirely against 3013 II, IX | at the breakfast-table. I requested the honour of paying her 3014 II, X | taste, and answering all her requirements as to beauty and comfort.~ ~ 3015 II, XI | myself with all utensils requisite for camp hospitals, and 3016 I, V | relief train started with the rescued before we could learn anything 3017 I, IV | an American nabob as the rescuer of his child was impossible! 3018 I, II | at the impossibility of rescuing them. It was a wild hurly-burly 3019 II, II | time I should have strongly resented the insult; but this time 3020 I, IX | condition that he should reside in this particular mansion 3021 II, XV | and plunder the house. The residences of two bankers have been 3022 Note1 | by Mme. F. Steinitz, who resides in Buda-Pest, and was selected 3023 I, IX | of all the lands and the residuary estate, on condition that 3024 II, VII | make about that ascetic who resisted the temptations of the flesh 3025 II, XI | become superstitious, and resort to clairvoyants and mediums 3026 I, II | shrieks from human voices resounded to and fro.~ ~The young 3027 II, III | although certainly very respectful and distant way; but of 3028 II, VI | invite, and the other to respectfully refuse. This is the law 3029 II, II | poison?" was the inquiring response, given with great quickness.~ ~" 3030 II, IV | and she won't take the responsibility of trusting me with the 3031 I, V | held her own innocent babe responsible for the misfortune of others. 3032 I, XIII | need of engaging any public restaurants or wine-shops. Siegfried 3033 II, XVI | all Europe believed in a restoration of peace.~ ~On the sixth 3034 I, I | our conversation; hence restraint was unnecessary. I asked 3035 I, X | extinct, and now it had to be resuscitated. This was a hard task, and 3036 II, IX | also found a pretext for retiring; she took the tea-tray from 3037 I, III | to be quick, and when he returns I will give him two hundred 3038 I, IV | mother and child after such a reunion!~ ~I had watched this family 3039 I, XIII | more funds. Now they had reunited to a last desperate method, 3040 II, VII | veins, lymphs, and nerves reveals in the ganglia. A firm pressure 3041 II, XVII | trying the winglets.~ ~"Reveille is sounded," said my friend, 3042 II, VIII | think I ought to postpone my revelations, because as long as this 3043 II, VII | lively one. At all such revels I have the peculiarity of 3044 II, X | deny the Devil, he will be revenged on you!" and I had seen 3045 II, IV | minor, my aunt takes her revenues, and, among her other accomplishments, 3046 II, VII | shooting-box shouts of revelry reverberated up to us. "You are going 3047 II, VII | was as firm as ever; the reverberation of the physician's step 3048 I, XII | respected, trusted, even revered, like a priest. For me there 3049 I, X | hunting for yours, your reverence," said I, with a grin.~ ~" 3050 II, III | I looked at her with the reverential awe of the priest before 3051 II, VI | that case her estates will revert to him as next heir."~ ~" 3052 II, XV | gave him my passport for revision. In an hour the passport 3053 II, VII | and told him that I had revoked my nomination."~ ~"You have 3054 I, II | body, every heart-string, revolted at it. Even now they quiver 3055 Note1 | of a year he joined the Revolutionists, and buckled on the sword 3056 II, XVI | moist from the press."~ ~I rewarded his good offices with the 3057 I, XI | Hungarian speeches were rhetorical gems, yet they could hardly 3058 II, VII | of the thumb against the rhomboideus, made her exclaim, "Oh, 3059 II, XI | hostilities, and stationed at the Rhone, whereas the Prussians are 3060 I, VII | only of a single vote. If Richard III could offer "a kingdom 3061 II, VII | bedstead. It was an embarras de richesses rarely met with; and in 3062 I, IX | you to keep up with the richest and the noblest of them 3063 II, X | instantly with a rosewood chest, richly ornamented with silver. 3064 I, VI | objects, and the large, richly-sculptured bed-canopy was all ablaze 3065 II, XV | valet. I thanked him for ridding me of my unpleasant visitors, 3066 II, XII | the death-groan, of its rider. Maddened horses, with their 3067 II, XII | with their dead or wounded riders hanging in the saddle, were 3068 I, II | gentlemen, and told them that a ridge of the Gnippe was crumbling, 3069 I, XIII | building. They wore long black riding-habits, all three alike, with blue 3070 I, VIII | left in possession of a rifle or any other shooting-iron; 3071 II, XIII | wounds got from sword-cuts, rifle-bullets, and gun-shots. "What an 3072 I, X | much good every honest and right-minded man could effect, and how 3073 II, XVII | ask you for justice; for a righteous judgment! I have never been 3074 I, IV | whole little face became rigid and dull, all child-like 3075 II, XIII | felt a blow on the leather rim of my képi. "A shrapnel 3076 I, VI | be - whether at New York, Rio de Janeiro, Palermo, or 3077 II, I | grotto broke, murmuring and rippling, a clear mountain spring, 3078 II, I | country she is always an early riser, and so are the children. 3079 II, VII | did my duty. The musculus risorius was moving already. A happy 3080 I, II | himself and his God. The ritual prayer-bands were upon his 3081 II, II | ambitious, and tried to rival and dethrone the Almighty. 3082 I, I | over which great mountain rivers splash down, roaring and 3083 I, XI | care."~ ~"Yes; but it is so riveted to the wall that we could 3084 I, IX | of it. I want to eat nice roasts, good cakes, and other delicate 3085 II, XIV | allowing a fellow with such a robber's look, who had unexpectedly 3086 I, IX | is rather a temptation to robbers. To keep a manservant for 3087 I, XI | hoof appear from under the robe?"~ ~That night, as Siegfried 3088 I, V | skirts and trailing brocade robes; no mail-clad, chivalrous-looking 3089 II, VII | white gloves, as did their robust waists from the tightly-laced 3090 I, III | which has pushed down that rock-colossus to destroy so many human 3091 I, I | graveyard, and the great rocks are giant tombstones, encircled 3092 II, I | woodcock's hoarse call, the roebuck's deep bellow, the wild 3093 I, VI | this point, the present romance is not written by me, but 3094 I, IX | bygone times, living on roots and other primitive food, 3095 I, III | by officials. Ropes and rope-ladders were fastened and suspended, 3096 I, III | interrogated by officials. Ropes and rope-ladders were fastened 3097 Note1 | married, his bride being Rosa Laborfalvi, the then leading 3098 I, VI | black beads resembling a rosary, and giving to the black-robed 3099 II, VIII | not watch you two at that rose-bed? That I did not notice the 3100 I, XIII | the side of a flowering rose-bush. I held a spade in my hand, 3101 I, XII | you this."~ ~I broke the rose-coloured wax, and drew out a tiny 3102 I, XIII | with me. You can take your rose-scions with you. My gardener will 3103 II, IV | recital of this story, Cenni's rosy countenance was crimsoned 3104 II, XI | Paris. I had taken the Swiss route, for in those days it was 3105 II, VII | and putting them all in a row on the table. "You see, 3106 I, V | escort with him like a prince royal! The honest Dr. Mayer, such 3107 II, VII | a parcel of blasphemous roysterers, and so I held my peace 3108 II, VII | if he had been called to rub this soft, velvety, odorous 3109 I, XI | Oh yes, a lot of old rubbish! I daresay it would bring 3110 II, II | with a winning smile on her ruby lips, after she had poisoned 3111 I, V | those finely-chiselled, ruby-coloured lips.~ ~"Pray pardon me 3112 II, VI | his host would call him a rude, unmannered peasant; for 3113 I, VIII | fellow, and what admirable rudeness! Stay, you unmannerly specimen 3114 I, VI | covered him up with the angora rug, and, letting down the curtains, 3115 II, XII | and death, the Almighty Ruler of the universe.~ ~This 3116 I, IV | not think the Gypsies the ruling race in Hungary, and he 3117 II, XI | German diplomat at the first rumour of the war, and was now 3118 II, VII | château" - ("What a good runner she is!" I thought) - "but 3119 II, VI | year, and in this way he runs into debt. He has practised 3120 II, XII | discovered that it was only a ruse.~ ~When the clouds of dust 3121 II, X | I felt a mad impulse to rush after her, and with one 3122 I, XI | even now, to keep them from rushing in upon you unawares, and 3123 I, II | Czrny Bog," or, as the Russians say, "Cserny Boh," the " 3124 II, VII | ran out of the room. The rustic bridesmaids stared at each 3125 I, XI | Nonsense!" he said, "these rustics will take you as you are, 3126 II, II | and there he wore a goat's-beard and red-feathered cap, was 3127 I, VI | Korhely-leves," which means "Scamp's-broth").~ ~"And the countess understands 3128 II, VIII | least, because I have cat's-eyes, a sharp tongue, and a quick 3129 II, XII | participating in the first battle at Saarbrücken, where old Dr. Duval's experience 3130 II, II | said Diodora.~ ~"Quien sabe?" answered Siegfried. "I 3131 II, XIV | spurs. By my side I had a sabre, a revolver, and a bag for 3132 II, XVII | submissive, doing penance in sackcloth and ashes. Again he called 3133 II, VII | down hard on the table. "Sacré de Dieu! This is treachery!" 3134 II, IV | man - so much so that she sacrificed position, family, and reputation 3135 I, XI | his housekeeper and his sacristan, affirm that your deceased 3136 II, VII | deltoidea, and then the sacrospinalis.~ ~What a fuss they make 3137 II, XII | wounded riders hanging in the saddle, were galloping on, while 3138 II, VII | see her. The ranger has saddled his horse, and is waiting 3139 I, IX | mail, shields, bucklers, saddles. In the fourth room are 3140 II, XII | heroic fight their lines were sadly decimated. At first they 3141 I, IX | all I ask for. But for a safeguard against extravagances, should 3142 I, IX | workmanship, and stronger and safer than any of your new inventions? 3143 II, XI | in those days it was the safest way to escape the obstacles 3144 II, III | spite of my professional sagacity, in spite of the knowledge 3145 II, XVII | but I hear he has a good salary, and is a general favourite. 3146 II, XIV | your money again on short sales."~ ~Camp life had taught 3147 II, XII | and a powerful discharge saluted the chasseurs.~ ~The shells 3148 II, XII | cannon only from hearing the salutes fired on our King's birthday, 3149 I, III | it the Czrny Bog of the Samaritans, the Lord of Darkness and 3150 II, III | poisons, or of no higher sanative power, at the best, than 3151 II, IV | tears or - his laughter? O sancta simplicitas!~ ~ ~ ~ 3152 II, VII | having a man enter her maiden sanctuary! It would not be believed 3153 II, VI | fact is, he is on such a sandbank, just at present, that it 3154 I, VI | In Budapest, in the Sándor Utcza Palace, the House 3155 II, II | desperate onslaught on the sandwiches; now he turned in comical 3156 I, X | of the table. Philosophy, sang-froid, and political indifference 3157 I, XII | the very man to advocate sanitary measures in Parliament. 3158 II, I | my budding-knife and the sap for budding. "What a surprise 3159 I, IX | remedy for old age?" was his sarcastic inquiry.~ ~"I do, to grow 3160 I, X | wounds I received at Nagy Sarló!" said he, with choking 3161 I, X | priest, with a broad red sash, who made himself especially 3162 II, VIII | has told you that I was a Satanella. Flamma, the - 'angel.' 3163 I, IV | nothing with me but a small satchel, which I had saved, but 3164 I, VII | the transaction even more satisfactory and profitable than drinking 3165 II, XII | the thickets. The soil was saturated with blood, and the dead 3166 II, I | angry, because I had had the sauciness to watch the movements of 3167 I, VI | barrels, and converted into sauer-kraut. This they send after me, 3168 II, XVI | no dream.~ ~Until noon I sauntered about in order to kill time. 3169 II, I | roses when I was up and sauntering among the flowers. I had 3170 I, VI | fresh and smoked ham, and sausages. This broth is in Hungary 3171 I, IV | he said, smilingly. "It saves you trouble. Look! If you 3172 I, VIII | never put a penny into any savings-bank, for he called them all 3173 I, VI | Korhely-leves," which means "Scamp's-broth").~ ~"And the countess 3174 II, XI | would have to pay from her scanty crops the heavy debts I 3175 II, VII | and then comes the regio scapularis, the deltoidea, and then 3176 I, X | which showed an immense scar, evidently an old sword-cut, 3177 I, I | diphtheritis, croup, measles, scarlet-fever, whooping-cough, and such 3178 II, XII | explode as they alight, and scatter their deadly fragments far 3179 II, XVI | wonderful man! How you have scented it all! Let me go back to 3180 I, VIII | of the present day are so sceptical and matter-of-fact that 3181 II, II | I thought I would plead scepticism.~ ~"Indeed, I can't," was 3182 I, IX | you young fellows are such sceptics that you will deny the existence 3183 I, XI | might have found an exact schedule, made by my uncle, with 3184 II, XVII | all the time I had been scheming for her ruin and dreaming 3185 II, VII | that plays the Capuchin in Schiller's Wallenteins's Camp?"~ ~ 3186 II, XI | preparing to break into Schleswig-Holstein. The sequel of the war can 3187 I, XI | would have made! But Mr. Schmerling knew a good many fine tricks, 3188 II, VI | almost as a foreigner and a scholar, not a patriotic politician! 3189 II, I | one looked like a scolded school-girl, who does not know what 3190 II, III | younger countesses were mere school-girls yet, and nobody would have 3191 I, X | were quite young men, old schoolfellows of mine; somewhat bad students 3192 I, XII | I, who might have been a scientific celebrity, a light in the 3193 II, XIV | the blood spilt by man. Scientists say that the gas freed by 3194 II, VIII | gorilla. I took a pair of scissors and clipped off the hair; 3195 II, I | little one looked like a scolded school-girl, who does not 3196 I, IX | Then I should hear a little scolding and quarrelling in the house, 3197 I, III | falling cinders, and his skin scorched and blistered, yet still 3198 I, III | flying about everywhere, scorching and kindling as they fell. 3199 II, XIII | shrapnel splinter!" I thought, scornfully: "could it not have hit 3200 II, XVII | hates me, despises me, and scorns me, simply because it would 3201 II, XI | revenge on her. More than that scoundrel who had betrayed her and 3202 I, II | and desperate daring, he scrambled downward to the third carriage. 3203 II, I | sand, carefully and safely scratching them in, and smoothing the 3204 I, II | the steps.~ ~I heard no screams, no cries, not a sound of 3205 II, II | handsome. In the old Jewish Scripture, from before Moses' time, 3206 I, VII | less gentlemanlike and less scrupulous, and perhaps not wholly 3207 I, VII | help it? The lists were scrutinised again, and it was found 3208 II, XIII | He gazed at me, as if scrutinising my features. "You are not 3209 II, XII | Hamoves, the angel with the scythe. I felt a chill, a shudder, 3210 I, IV | ventured to observe that we Scythians, barbarians as we were held 3211 II, I | What are you talking about sea-doves?" asked the countess; "it 3212 II, I | of deep blue, or rather sea-green, eyes, and her little coral 3213 II, VI | transparent, pale face, her deep, sea-tinted eyes, and her silent, cherry 3214 II, I | to translate an item on sea-turtles from an English paper. He 3215 II, I | wore an antique carnelian seal-ring, with my family crest, and 3216 I, XI | the will was a package, sealed; and addressed to you - ' 3217 I, VIII | with the cheapest kind of sealing-wax, and, on opening the envelope, 3218 II, VI | with you to take off the seals from everything, and put 3219 II, XI | and mine! But let her search ever so thoroughly, she 3220 I, I | fist.~ ~At last we were seated. The negro was gone, the 3221 II, XII | served as camp-surgeon at Sebastopol, and I succeeded in acquiring 3222 I, XI | bashfulness of a novice. Siegfried seconded me in all my remarks with 3223 I, XIII | game of 'patience,' and secretly indulging in a sip. My aunt 3224 II, XVII | in general as a cooling sedative. There are different versions 3225 II, III | spirits; but, as soon as she sees you or hears your voice, 3226 I, XI | personality, and a "grand seigneur." His purse was always open, 3227 I, IV | natural in such a mother to seize this child, and, in the 3228 II, XV | someone caught it from behind, seizing tight hold of both hand 3229 II, XVII | the ice of solitude and self-abnegation. I want to be happy, and 3230 I, VI | this had given rise to her self-accusations. She was nowhere happy but 3231 II, XVII | yielded to a flattering self-conceit. You see, I acknowledge 3232 II, XIII | And then I thought what a self-conceited fool I had been to think 3233 II, XVII | indefatigable activity, your self-denial, generosity, and discreet 3234 II, XVII | generous, disinterested, and self-denying to them, and not to me? 3235 II, XVII | lacerations of my wounded self-esteem for ever. You cannot ask 3236 II, XIII | afford me a disguise for self-murder. "Why," he said, "do you 3237 I, X | sufficiently strong in my own self-respect and clear conscience, which, 3238 II, XIV | courage and daring, of the self-sacrifice which made you risk your 3239 I, XII | least recalled me from my self-tormenting course so far as my inward 3240 I, IV | tea-room, passing a little, semi-circular, ship-cabin-like apartment, 3241 II, IX | Miss Klara."~ ~"Ah!" Like Semiramis she stood before me. "Who 3242 I, II | making a vivid sketch of the sensational scene. The illustrated papers 3243 I, XIII | but I tried to hide my sensations and play the Cincinnatus 3244 I, III | fire "pchi!" he fell down senseless.~ ~By this time the heat 3245 I, V | nerves are not a bit less sensitive than those of any other 3246 II, XVII | heartless libertine, a selfish sensualist. You will mock at God, mock 3247 I, X | duels, but the concluding sentences met with such unanimous 3248 II, II | the cetonias out of some sentimental fancy for them, but for 3249 II, XII | there they had cut down the sentinel, ordered food and drink, 3250 I, XIII | Vice-Governor does not send his sentinels to guard the iron chest 3251 I, V | making. He must needs have a separate parlour to himself! And 3252 I, VIII | notes. These he rolled up separately, and pushed one by one into 3253 II, XVII | this door, the way that separates you from me, leads over 3254 II, XVI | in large letters, "Sedan, September 2, 8 p.m. MacMahon's army 3255 II, XI | Schleswig-Holstein. The sequel of the war can be foretold 3256 I, XIII | girl-rider cried out:~ ~"Tu y serais!" Then she beckoned the 3257 II, XI | devil in the guise of a seraph! But I said to the lawyer, " 3258 II, X | clasped in each other; that seraph-face of hers, that seemed the 3259 II, I | itself into the lake by a series of cascades.~ ~In the centre 3260 I, I | every hour, according to the serpentine windings of the road. I 3261 I, III | ocean of hell. Huge fiery serpents came hissing and snarling 3262 I, XI | the old dining-room made serviceable. He had also procured a 3263 I, XI | time the court holds its session; they have to appear before 3264 II, XIV | great battles stormy weather sets in. The poets will have 3265 II, XVII | that the acquisition of a settled residence might betray my 3266 I, XI | properly."~ ~"Bravissimo! That settles the question. A clearer 3267 I, XI | the amount of tax would be seventeen florins, and on the two 3268 II, XI | advance. The banker put seventy-five per cent of the nominal 3269 I, XI | valued at three hundred and seventy-nine florins and forty-five kreutzers. 3270 II, IV | is sometimes subject to severe neuralgic attacks, and, 3271 II, III | attacks of greater or less severity, and I can tell you exactly 3272 I, IX | Etruscan, Chinese and Japanese, Sèvres and Dresden, old Hungarian, 3273 I, XII | will plaster him up, or sew him up, as may be necessary. 3274 I, XII | gave up shaving, dressed shabbily, and ordered a dinner of 3275 I, IX | It was dusk, and the shadows of night were falling fast 3276 II, II | presentiment crept over me - a shadowy warning that the declaration 3277 II, I | drooping foliage forming a shady roof above the little circuit 3278 II, XIII | a Prussian officer, and shaken hands with him? Would this 3279 II, XIII | wooden bridge that led over a shallow rivulet the soldiers were 3280 II, II | far as to compose a whole Shamanism of the Devil's special qualities; 3281 I, XII | third I noticed that I had shamefully neglected my uncle's dearly-cherished 3282 II, IV | Pardon!"~ ~"Never mind! I shan't pick up the 'jackanapes' 3283 I, VII | village, in an old tumble-down shanty of his own, lived a poor 3284 II, I | large, but magnificently shaped. Could I do less than kiss 3285 II, XVI | in, and that the Emperor shared the same fate. It was easy 3286 II, XIV | the decline was all the sharper in consequence. The French 3287 II, III | than those poor birds who shatter their heads and beaks in 3288 II, XVI | the devil's forelock and shaved off his beard, but he won' 3289 I, II | offering a fortune for belts, shawls, and cords. His newly-married 3290 II, XVI | had occurred without the shedding of a single drop of blood, 3291 I, XII | hospitality; but if you boil a sheep and open a barrel of sixpenny 3292 I, IX | diet and habits would be sheer lunacy; nay, worse, it would 3293 II, I | sprang up and put her little shell-coloured hand to my lips. "No betrayal, 3294 II, XV | that that tiny, silent, shell-mouth of hers could be capable 3295 II, XII | saluted the chasseurs.~ ~The shells made a fearful gap in the 3296 I, II | escaped from immediate death, sheltered from the tremendous cataract 3297 I, IX | panoplies, coats of mail, shields, bucklers, saddles. In the 3298 I, VIII | prodigal, and have made shift to live decently upon your 3299 II, X | your wedding-day without a shilling in your pocket, as your 3300 I, IV | a little, semi-circular, ship-cabin-like apartment, with small, round 3301 I, IV | temporarily, pending their shipment to New York. There, in Mr. 3302 II, I | Pepita waistcoat, Madapolam shirt-collar, Bismarck en colère scarf, 3303 I, IX | consisted of a set of valueless shirt-studs and a watch that would not 3304 II, VII | force that it broke into shivers, and the foaming contents 3305 I, VIII | of a rifle or any other shooting-iron; and surely you will not 3306 II, I | the sea to the sand of the shore, lays its eggs in that sand, 3307 II, XII | of the universe.~ ~This short-lived sensation of terror every 3308 II, V | Cenerentola, which we have shortened to Cenni. Her real name 3309 II, XII | anything of the effect of the shots, for the cannon-smoke envelopes 3310 I, XII | away with garden-knife, shovel, and spade, pruning, weeding, 3311 II, XVII | father's neck, and then he showered a volley of kisses and caresses 3312 II, VII | long-drawn; in the magnetic showers of the body I recognised 3313 I, III | some official personage in showy uniform was expecting me 3314 II, XIII | The Bavarians sent another shrapnell shell after us, and, as 3315 I, VIII | time when I was not the shrewd hard fellow that I am, but 3316 II, VII | bin erkannt!" The bride shrieked, and, bounding from my side, 3317 II, I | squirrel's chatter, and the shrill cries which announce the 3318 I, XII | and you are not the man to shrink from an acknowledged duty. 3319 II, III | And do you know that this shrinking is one of the symptoms of 3320 II, VII | was awaiting her in the shriving-pew to receive the confession 3321 I, IX | lips, and said testily, shrugging his shoulders, "What can 3322 II, X | light in their eyes. I had shuddered and shunned them, and yet 3323 II, X | eyes. I had shuddered and shunned them, and yet I had plunged 3324 II, XVII | enough to play a game of shuttlecock with a lump of gold. Then 3325 II, I | and - talk of his being shy in the company of ladies! - 3326 II, I | For a while they looked shyly at me, while they busied 3327 II, X | sue for a legal divorce? "Si fuerit dolus?" Had I not 3328 I, XI | stick to each other like the Siamese twins. And the man whom 3329 II, X | designed the whole plot. Her sickness that night was simulated 3330 I, II | forked beard and greasy side-locks dangled as he chanted his 3331 I, II | forward, because in jumping sideways or backward he invariably 3332 Note2 | In Part II, Chapter IV, "siezed" has been changed to "seized".~ ~ 3333 II, VII | once in soft, voluptuous sighs of relief, deep and long-drawn; 3334 I, V | show me more dreadful sights, that I may suffer more. 3335 I, XIII | next. - Yours, as ever,~ ~"SIGID."~ ~The previous day had 3336 I, I | able to teach more than sign-talk, and that is insufficient. 3337 II, XIV | the bell three times as a signal that the master of the house 3338 I, III | his red shawl to use as a signal-flag.~ ~As the shepherd at length 3339 I, I | black leaden roof, the high signal-pole in front of it, above which 3340 I, II | he was looking for the signal-post, and could not find it.~ ~" 3341 II, VII | the fountain-head, of that significant partiality shown to me. 3342 II, VI | in the palm of your hands signify?"~ ~"Memento mori," I said, 3343 I, V | paroquet, no monkey, no little, silken-haired lap-dog, no St. Bernard 3344 II, I | fair girl had laid upon the sill, and, fastening it in the 3345 II, I | common progenitors, the Simians - that is, if we believe 3346 II, III | I don't understand the simile."~ ~"Do you know the story 3347 II, VII | marry unshriven. So she simpered and blushed a good deal, 3348 I, VI | The little fellow was simpering, and tottered drowsily to 3349 I, IV | foreign country, I prefer the simplest inn or the obscurest hotel 3350 II, III | sue for her hand except simpletons. All these sweet-spoken, 3351 II, IV | his laughter? O sancta simplicitas!~ ~ ~ ~ 3352 II, I | pleasant contrast to the rural simplicity of the chairs and table 3353 II, X | sickness that night was simulated in order to bring you near 3354 II, II | There are cases in which simulation is identical with the symptoms 3355 II, II | for such; but still the simulator is never quite sane. I had 3356 I, X | from their prescriptive sinecures, went up to Vienna and did 3357 I, IX | the house, and she would sing to me and play the piano 3358 I, III | and dangling locks were singed by the falling cinders, 3359 I, XI | venture to use to a variety singer; but the little innocents 3360 II, IV | marriageable men of their set. Singularly enough, the young stranger, 3361 I, I | I watched the rising and sinking of the moon, which phenomenon 3362 II, VIII | or down to earth like a sinner. I also look like a bold 3363 I, XIII | secretly indulging in a sip. My aunt is but one year 3364 II, VII | found by this, her divine sister. The thick tresses of raven 3365 II, IV | than the friendly, even sisterly regard with which most ladies 3366 I, VI | a memorial chapel on the site of the accident, and for 3367 I, II | doubled up Turk-fashion, sits a young painter with Mephisto 3368 II, VII | an old Gothic edifice, situated in a large clearing in the 3369 I, VII | had already, at the age of six-and-twenty, occupied the position of 3370 I, XII | sheep and open a barrel of sixpenny wine or beer for them, then 3371 II, XVI | restoration of peace.~ ~On the sixth day, the limit I had given 3372 II, IV | a year to the amount of sixty thousand florins, so she 3373 I, XI | one hundred florins, and sixty-four fifty-florin bills were 3374 Note1 | purpose.~ ~Maurus Jókai is now sixty-six years of age, having been 3375 II, VII | uncoiled and scattered in rich skeins on the pillows and the coverlet. 3376 I, IV | newspapers. He then quickly and skilfully prepared me a bath, unpacked 3377 II, XIII | the Bavarians. It was at a skirmish of artillery. A couple of 3378 I, V | white-wigged ladies in hooped skirts and trailing brocade robes; 3379 I, II | growth, mounting up to the sky - a demon with a thousand 3380 I, II | asthma and heart disease slackened my speed.~ ~There was nobody 3381 II, III | advice, never tired, never slackening in spirit or courage, and 3382 II, VIII | not recoil from the basest slander. Do you think I did not 3383 I, XI | to go," said Siegfried, slapping me on the shoulder; "never 3384 I, IV | with the former, and of all slavery I fear that of etiquette 3385 II, III | who willingly become their slaves.~ ~To me Countess Diodora 3386 II, VII | they answered in classic Slavonian, "Gyekujem peknye mladi-pan," 3387 II, II | for this learned woman is slaying me with pandects, and, if 3388 I, I | taken possession of the sleeping-car compartments, and I owed 3389 II, VI | He feeds at every board, sleeps in other men's rooms, is 3390 I, VI | below the loose lace-trimmed sleeves. She led little James into 3391 I, VI | after year the whole crop is sliced up, put into great barrels, 3392 I, VI | from the juice, and some slices of cabbage, with sour cream 3393 II, XIV | rye bread and bacon, and, slicing it up, I toasted it at the 3394 I, II | Like a huge serpent it slid down, the great glowing 3395 I, IX | sight to see, and I was slightly faint and dizzy from bewilderment 3396 II, VII | around the head, the coverlet slipped down unnoticed, and the 3397 II, I | movements of those tiny slippered feet in pink stockings as 3398 I, I | asked if we were free from small-pox, diphtheritis, croup, measles, 3399 I, I | awake. We had reached a smaller station where the train 3400 I, V | was obliged to recount the smallest incident of the ghastly 3401 I, XI | that eternally burning and smarting spot, and felt an almost 3402 I, VIII | becoming an apothecary, smearing plasters, mixing poisons, 3403 II, VII | driven out Cenni because she smelt of wine."~ ~"So Cenni was 3404 I, I | wholly unconcerned, and the smiles from the great black shining 3405 II, XV | had to silence that burly smith by a smart cut on the hand 3406 I, II | sparkling eyes and tongues, a smoke-fiend!~ ~The great boiler of the 3407 II, XVII | adding radiant circles to the smoke-wreaths of our cigarettes, and sending 3408 I, IX | You asked me if I was a smoker. I am, but I do not smoke 3409 II, VI | horses and carriages, and smokes other men's cigars. When 3410 I, II | prison. Then for a while the smoky cloud involved everything 3411 I, X | my seat.~ ~"Who may that smooth-faced stranger be? and how comes 3412 I, VIII | courts?" he said, with a snarl.~ ~"No! I am going to study 3413 I, III | serpents came hissing and snarling up to the barricade, and 3414 II, IV | risk of having the girl snatched from me by some jackanapes 3415 II, XIV | it on your breast!" and, snatching it out of my hand, she pinned 3416 II, IX | equal," said he, with a sneer.~ ~"Siegfried!" said Diodora, " 3417 I, I | for them, with a simple sneeze of their most illustrious 3418 I, I | babies, giggling maidens, snoring or smoking men, and hilarious 3419 I, I | huge boulders, imbedded in snow and ice, the Alpine vegetation 3420 I, VIII | old man, with the flowing snow-white hair and beard, pruning 3421 I, XII | home - a broken, disgraced, snuffed-out wretch - a dead man, indeed!~ ~ 3422 II, VIII | hair; then I prepared the soap and razor for shaving the 3423 II, I | the noise of our wheels, soared above our heads. From the 3424 II, V | language, and the bride will sob and entreat you to take 3425 II, XVII | she broke into passionate sobbing, and, crouching down at 3426 I, XI | music-halls. I had lived soberly and industriously up to 3427 I, II | despairing yells, hysterical sobs, heart-rending prayers; 3428 I, XII | grow too fast for us. The Socialist rabble is preaching the 3429 II, V | sorrow, who will degrade, socially and morally humiliate you, 3430 II, VI | and I think in most other societies as well, there is a certain 3431 I, II | starting almost out of their sockets, were fixed upon one of 3432 I, VI | and pulled off the tiny socks. The mother stood there, 3433 II, II | painted Sybaris, and of Socrates it is said that he lived 3434 I, V | touch of a spring, this softly-pouring waterfall might be shut 3435 I, IV | guest for the time of your sojourn in Paris. Promise me to 3436 I, I | compartments, and I owed it solely to the virtue of an extraordinarily 3437 II, VII | the process of having the soles of their feet rubbed.~ ~ 3438 I, V | any other transparent but solid substance; it consisted 3439 I, IX | sword was that of Sultan Soliman.~ ~It was dusk, and the 3440 I, XII | No doubt, in time, this solitary, secluded life would not 3441 II, XI | clairvoyants and mediums for the solution of the torturing mystery. 3442 II, XV | my room, and together we solved the contents of both letters.~ ~ 3443 II, IX | had sung highly amusing songs. The girls had been called 3444 II, XIII | although I think it tasted of soot, and read one of the Paris 3445 I, III | what sinful, subtle, and sophistical thoughts crowded into our 3446 II, XVII | the lethargy caused by the soporific potion he slew my soul! 3447 I, VIII | continually, resembled some sorcerer who, with a single touch 3448 II, XVII | made cognisant of our past sorrows and trials, I thank you 3449 II, XII | was pealing, the bugle was sounding the commands. All at once 3450 I, VI | slices of cabbage, with sour cream and fresh and smoked 3451 II, II | miasmata, spores, bacilli, as sources of bodily diseases, of inherited 3452 II, XI | republic was neutral, and the southern part of France was quiet. 3453 II, I | In the centre of this space the breakfast-table was 3454 I, II | mountain, and that small span of star-lit heaven above; 3455 II, XI | from my bones and every spark of hope and brightness from 3456 I, II | with a thousand glistening, sparkling eyes and tongues, a smoke-fiend!~ ~ 3457 I, III | altar-fire that conjuring Jew had spat, because He would not listen 3458 II, XI | and "Vive la paix!" Public speakers delivered long orations 3459 I, II | season, and yesterday he specially warned the gentlemen, and 3460 I, IV | appreciate both the Hungarian specialties. The great artist, and the 3461 I, XI | you three of the latter species presently - a strong-minded, 3462 I, VIII | grudge money to secure rare specimens. His flower-garden was a 3463 II, XVI | out - possibly the beaten speculators - and was borne by the current 3464 II, XIII | Paris. This was now the speediest way of travelling, for the 3465 II, IV | was soon introduced, and speedily became at home in English 3466 I, IX | him only when in want of spending-money; the other had never asked 3467 I, VIII | but a true Dumany and a spendthrift. I can show you a heap of 3468 I, XI | good taste in the domestic sphere. He purchased the horses 3469 I, I | filigree work, some giant spider's web, extending across 3470 I, I | been formed out of the milk spilled by Amalthea? If we could 3471 II, XIV | away with tears the blood spilt by man. Scientists say that 3472 II, II | impossible. She answered me with Spinoza. I again spoke of Thomasius, 3473 II, XI | incantation of conjurers or spirit-rappers will call me back. The dead 3474 I, III | flames with both palms; then, spitting into the fire "pchi!" he 3475 I, I | which great mountain rivers splash down, roaring and foaming 3476 II, VII | the foaming contents went splashing into the faces of the company. 3477 I, II | tremendous crash, and a hissing, spluttering, crackling noise, the whole 3478 II, VII | ll make the best of the spoiled game. I see the prima donna 3479 II, VIII | bowl of water, dipped a sponge into it, and washed my face, 3480 II, IX | milk, Masinka brought some spongy rye bread, fresh from the 3481 II, II | reason. I know of miasmata, spores, bacilli, as sources of 3482 II, I | us this morning, and make sport of us? Let us treat you 3483 I, VII | the national cockade we sported in common.~ ~At six o'clock 3484 II, IV | treasure he possessed, his spotless name and honour, and had 3485 I, VIII | mixing poisons, and setting sprained joints. Go to thy uncle, 3486 II, V | festival banquet will be spread in the shooting-box. It 3487 II, I | all covered with deerskin spreads, and the furniture was all 3488 I, XII | gets his head broken in the spree, you will plaster him up, 3489 I, VIII | in my uncle's heart, one sprinkle of poetry in his nature. 3490 II, I | claiming that affinity. His sprouting moustache and beard are 3491 II, XIV | rough, high top-boots, with spurs. By my side I had a sabre, 3492 II, XV | stone lions on St. Mark's Square in Venice."~ ~"And what 3493 II, I | the wild boar's grunt, the squirrel's chatter, and the shrill 3494 II, X | behind, just as they had stabbed me unawares, like assassins. 3495 I, XI | there is the grange, the stable, etc., and then you will 3496 I, V | gentlemen, with marshals' staffs, keys, and like emblems 3497 II, I | the grotto to see what the staid Diodora was laughing at. " 3498 II, XV | in the French cause as to stake his whole fortune on it 3499 II, III | stroke of midnight, duly stalked through locked rooms and 3500 I, VIII | he selected a cow for his stall. This cow he attended to 3501 II, XII | The earth shook with the stamping of the hoofs, "Quadrupedante 3502 I, IV | works of art of the highest standard.~ ~I ventured to observe 3503 II, IX | compose yourself. This lady stands under my protection. I have 3504 I, II | and that small span of star-lit heaven above; all those 3505 II, VII | and collected man into a stark raving madman.~ ~For a lunatic 3506 II, VII | work of creation than the starry heaven. When, at a word, 3507 I, II | his hymns, while his eyes, starting almost out of their sockets, 3508 I, I | After the lady came a grand stately-looking negro servant, with gold-braided 3509 Note1 | author, but a financier, a statesman, and a journalist as well.~ ~ ~ ~ 3510 II, X | stood there, pale, cold, statue-like, and her voice sounded like 3511 I, IX | date of every object. This statuette is a Praxiteles; this picture 3512 I, XI | time, but to take up your status in your new domain to-morrow, 3513 I, II | become of those who had stayed in the falling carriages?~ ~ 3514 II, XVII | shutters the rising sun was stealing, decorating the wall-tapestry 3515 I, II | could see great clouds of steam arise from the puffing and 3516 I, II | upon the engine. The huge, steam-vomiting leviathan was crushed in 3517 I, II | upright, like some huge steeple. This dreadful structure 3518 Note1 | of the author by Mme. F. Steinitz, who resides in Buda-Pest, 3519 I, IV | her own child and not a stepson, as I had guessed. Her behaviour 3520 II, VII | musculus cucullaris and the sternocleido mastoideus. "Ah, that is 3521 I, IX | during his lifetime and stewardship he would not sell or give 3522 II, XIV | cognac. It is a powerful stimulant, good for fever and ague, 3523 I, XII | feared, and that will only stimulate your courage. You will be 3524 I, IX | great wisdom. Had he not stipulated such hard conditions, my 3525 II, XV | woman to keep quiet and not stir, I entered the salon.~ ~ 3526 II, XI | well-known and trustworthy stockbroker, and instructed him to speculate 3527 II, I | tiny slippered feet in pink stockings as they mounted the ladder 3528 I, V | to the lady, I silently stole out of the room.~ ~ ~ ~ 3529 II, IX | countess, on two embroidered stools, sat the two girls, engaged 3530 I, VIII | the cloak that covered his stooping shoulders on the street 3531 I, I | where the train usually stops for a few minutes only, 3532 II, XV | and they are coming to storm and plunder the house. The 3533 II, XIV | usually after great battles stormy weather sets in. The poets 3534 I, XII | and we Conservatives must strain every nerve to defeat them, 3535 I, VIII | large boiler, boiled and strained it, and then drank it, because 3536 I, IX | our mother, while I became strangely infatuated with the old 3537 II, XIII | was driven back into Metz. Strasburg was besieged, and MacMahon 3538 II, VII | nothing to him but epidermis, stratum mucosum Malpighii; the white, 3539 II, VI | of some iced coffee, and strawberries with cream; but this time 3540 II, XI | shall not spend more than is strictly necessary. I am of a saving 3541 II, IX | dressed, and taking long strides on the garden path. How 3542 II, I | Countess Diodora was strikingly handsome. Tall of stature 3543 I, II | and as I wound the silken strip tight around the unhappy 3544 I, II | clothes and knotting the strips together. A compassionate 3545 I, I | tiny hand, and caressingly stroked the fur collar of my coat. 3546 II, VI | although the man protests and struggles as much as possible. And 3547 II, II | before ladies! Coarse and stubby like that of a Slav field-labourer, 3548 I, XI | pipes - old clay pipes, stuck into cane stems. They are 3549 I, VI | she wore was a large cross studded with dark-blue diamonds, 3550 II, XII | expeditions; there their studies receive the finishing-touch, 3551 I, II | heart-rending prayers; and as I stumbled over the twisted and broken 3552 II, X | automaton. I felt like one stupefied, like one who had meant 3553 I, XIII | time for both."~ ~"Oh, you stupid fellow! Where is that letter? 3554 I, XI | yet they could hardly be styled Hungarian, for they were 3555 II, III | to be always elegant and stylish, and I should like to give 3556 I, VII | Slavs drink whiskey; the Suabians or Germans, beer; the Ugro-Fins 3557 I, V | gone over to New York to subdue with their haughty grandeur 3558 II, XVII | feeble spirit, and long ago subdued by the more potent angel 3559 II, XI | their innocent, peace-loving subjects into bloody combats to feed 3560 I, II | made a picture of terrible sublimity.~ ~But still the god of 3561 II, XVII | atone for those sins by meek submission, dutiful obedience, ardent 3562 II, III | as yet; for I would never submit to that treatment from a 3563 I, VII | was the war-cry of the subordinate drummers. But how could 3564 I, VI | I shall most willingly subscribe to."~ ~"Then tell me how 3565 I, V | other transparent but solid substance; it consisted of a beautiful, 3566 I, VII | potter. We had sent his substitute, the poultry-dealer, with 3567 I, XI | German word failed him, he substituted for it a French, English, 3568 I, IX | brother was reckoned up and subtracted from their share under his 3569 I, II | close to him. At last he succeeds in joining both of her hands 3570 I, III | with a relief train for succour. Tell him to be quick, and 3571 II, I | flowers instead of the wild suckers." I had put my roses into 3572 I, II | came to a dead stop, the suddenness of which threw the carriages 3573 I, II | the top? How many of the sufferers were yet alive? What power 3574 II, III | guess the nature of her sufferings, and I told her that I had 3575 II, IV | remedies for her pains, she suffers all day. During these paroxysms 3576 I, XII | She was a woman, and that sufficed. No! the Devil is not dead; 3577 I, X | their opinion, and felt sufficiently strong in my own self-respect 3578 I, IV | of her love and joy, half suffocate it with her kisses and caresses. 3579 I, III | could breathe amid that suffocating smoke, that lurid loathsome 3580 I, VII | majority of one vote, my suffrages being 1,501 in number, whereas 3581 II, X | higher than at present," I suggested.~ ~"That is possible. But 3582 II, XVII | I got by following your suggestions, but the suicide speculation 3583 I, I | sir, but this is the only suitable place we have, and the little 3584 II, XI | right to squander it - if it suited my whims - on herself.~ ~ 3585 II, III | real, earnest, and sincere suitor. Of course, there were a 3586 II, III | creature, who tortures all her suitors to death, for aunty is also 3587 II, XI | and seven fierce tropical summers had passed since that time, 3588 II, IX | in finishing the Japanese sunbird; and in the balcony door 3589 II, IX | capital fun. The Father had sung highly amusing songs. The 3590 I, V | her soft, dimpled chin sunk down on her breast, and 3591 II, II | material element, and it is superfluous to look to that which is 3592 I, II | masculine arms tried with superhuman force to lift the iron weight 3593 I, V | those who perished, and to superintend the erection of a memorial 3594 I, IV | some time in the nursery, superintending the children's ablutions, 3595 II, XII | best I could. My immediate superior was old Duval, who had served 3596 II, XII | heroically against the crushing superiority of the Germans, vainly hoping 3597 I, II | suffer for the fault of his superiors. But I will not stand it; 3598 II, XVII | myself to the Devil, and am supplied by him with infernal lore. 3599 II, VIII | knives. Am I mistaken in supposing that you have come to ask 3600 II, XVII | of the correctness of the supposition. You accepted your position 3601 II, XI | realm, where he reigned supreme, and it was impossible not 3602 II, I | them in, and smoothing the surface with its front paws. These 3603 II, XII | presence of his masters. French surgery in general occupies a foremost 3604 II, XI | procured all the necessary surgical instruments at my own expense. 3605 I, I | noxious, dangerous mist surrounds us entirely.~ ~But once 3606 I, X | somehow, so he served as surveyor, and that was his treachery," 3607 II, IV | physician to persuade Diodora to swallow this bitter medicine. She 3608 I, VIII | poor father's fortune was swallowed by the lawyers, although 3609 II, I | Graceful white and black swans swam on the lake, and two tiny 3610 II, I | Graceful white and black swans swam on the lake, and two 3611 II, III | head-drummers, and subalterns swarmed into Vernöcze, bringing 3612 I, I | him at all; but when the swarthy giant caught the two fair 3613 I, X | I was in the kingdom of Swatopluk, taking possession of my 3614 II, XII | beneath them, were cursing and swearing, and invoking God and Devil 3615 I, II | one shrieks, cries, prays, swears, raves.~ ~No; not every 3616 II, III | except simpletons. All these sweet-spoken, flattering, aping, thought-snatching, 3617 I, V | paradise, gaily-plumed, sweet-voiced birds of different size 3618 II, VIII | over Anadyomene! How that sweet-winged creature, Psyche, must have 3619 II, XVI | performance was enough to sweeten the pang caused by the catastrophe 3620 I, IV | all child-like mirth and sweetness had vanished. He looked 3621 II, VII | and hands which seemed to swell out of their number seven 3622 I, II | darkness below, and with a swift and fearful growth, mounting 3623 II, XII | shot. The Prussians wheeled swiftly, and hussars, battery and 3624 II, XV | beating his breast and swinging his hammer, inviting me 3625 I, X | immense scar, evidently an old sword-cut, got up from his seat at 3626 II, XIII | men, with wounds got from sword-cuts, rifle-bullets, and gun-shots. " 3627 II, II | manner Menander has painted Sybaris, and of Socrates it is said 3628 I, V | would she let me omit a syllable. And when at the most fearful 3629 I, XI | the semblance of a lovely sylph, until all at once he saw 3630 II, XI | same quiet, pale, silent, sylph-like being as she had been when 3631 II, VII | alike. There are certain symbolical marks on the bottles, well 3632 II, XVI | Spicheren must have been a symphony in comparison.~ ~I promised 3633 I, I | native Hungarian tongue, "Szegény fiúcska!" ("Poor little 3634 II, IX | leave I shall hasten to Szepes-Váralja, to the bishop, for a dispensation, 3635 I, XI | chaise and four to Nagy Szombat, where we took the train 3636 II, V | the germ properly into the T-shape?"~ ~My whole frame trembled 3637 II, V | how, in the first place, a T-shaped incision has to be made 3638 II, IX | lace curtains; it was a "tableau en plein air" that met my 3639 I, IX | auction. Of silver there was a tablespoon, a teaspoon, a ladle, and 3640 I, IX | and two or three pieces of tableware, bent, crooked, and broken, 3641 I, IV | twice its size, and an Alma Tadema. Mr. Dumany, observing my 3642 I, IV | he had allied his great talents with the Opposition. He 3643 I, VIII | next of blood and kin, he talks of becoming an apothecary, 3644 II, I | style for a country visit: tanned shoes, knickerbocker jacket, 3645 II, XIV | furious. Fate was mocking me, tantalising me. Instead of taking from 3646 II, IV | am not going to play the Tantalus for years, and run the risk 3647 II, X | fastened with tri-coloured tape, with a large official seal 3648 II, II | it was the most artistic, tasteful, and delightful enamel-work 3649 I, V | crossing a long suite of tastefully-furnished rooms, I noticed the entire 3650 I, IX | primitive food, and never tasting of a decent cooked meal, 3651 I, XI | hundred florins the amount of tax would be seventeen florins, 3652 I, XI | it in every way, for the tax-commissioner would have liked to examine 3653 I, XI | an inventory of it, and taxed it; here it is."~ ~With 3654 I, VII | right he possessed as a taxpayer. Our drummers found the 3655 I, IV | I followed him into the tea-room, passing a little, semi-circular, 3656 I, VI | we sat down at the little tea-table. Mr. Dumany threw a few 3657 I, IV | country is the professor who teaches the Ugro-Finnish tongue, 3658 II, X | and we would see whose teachings would prove more destructive! 3659 I, II | showing me a sorrowful and tear-stained face, "for Heaven's sake, 3660 I, IX | there was a tablespoon, a teaspoon, a ladle, and two or three 3661 II, XVI | for the French.~ ~Another telegram came from Mézières, according 3662 I, XII | If the chief of the party telegraphs you that some great division 3663 II, IV | instrument as your vision by the telescope, so that you might have 3664 II, IV | Do you think we have no telescopes in the house? I have witnessed 3665 II, II | holy scarabæus Herodotus tells us that he dies of the odour 3666 II, III | Woman in White" and our "Red Templar," who, at the stroke of 3667 I, I | should leave their marble temples, and gaze about on the world 3668 I, IV | these two were there only temporarily, pending their shipment 3669 II, II | the creation of man, the tempter and seducer."~ ~"So part 3670 II, XI | I hated her, Lilith, the tempting devil in the guise of a 3671 I, XII | politics. The carefully tended Isabella grapes wound their 3672 I, X | spite of my cosmopolitan tendencies and in spite of modern equality.~ ~ ~ ~ 3673 I, X | was rather cosmopolitan in tendency; and as to giving up my 3674 II, XIII | each of my charges with the tenderness of a loving father; "but 3675 II, V | blush. Try your hand at lawn tennis."~ ~And I went with him 3676 I, I | could not speak up to his tenth year; then he recovered, 3677 II, XIII | given orders to burn all tents, since there was not time 3678 II, IV | courtship, if so it must be termed, although the lady was doing 3679 II, XI | such a time the railroad termini are naturally the centres 3680 II, X | is some evil dream, some test, perhaps, of the sincerity 3681 I, II | light in time, and I shall testify for Jörge in case of need. 3682 I, IX | smile on my lips, and said testily, shrugging his shoulders, " 3683 I, XI | the court, and introduce testimony. All this takes a month 3684 II, XI | Government bring in moratorium? Tête carrée!" The latter was 3685 Note2 | typographical errors in the original text have been corrected.~ ~In 3686 I, IX | ideas you will get from the text-books; never to do a kindness 3687 II, IX | national tricolour at Mount Thabor, while the first Vernöczy 3688 I, XIII | you. My gardener will be thankful for them. We have a lot 3689 I, IV | vine-embowered cottage, or even a thatch-roofed hut, with a garland of gourd 3690 II, V | expression in a variety theatre or any other low place of 3691 II, VII | unnatural if an old Vienna theatre-goer like me did not know Seestern, 3692 II, VI | I returned to our former theme, and asked the Vice-Governor 3693 II, III | belief, our entire pathology, therapeutic, etc., was not worth the 3694 | therein 3695 | Thereupon 3696 I, VI | born another such a pair of thick-skinned, iron-nerved human beings 3697 II, XIII | hottest and the balls flying thickest? True, you have by this 3698 II, XII | among the vineyards and the thickets. The soil was saturated 3699 II, XII | throes of death, were strewn thickly around. We hastened thither 3700 I, I | little boy, with very red, thin, tightly-compressed lips, 3701 | Thine 3702 I, VIII | unfeeling father. I'll give you thir - no, twenty florins!" But 3703 II, II | Spinoza. I again spoke of Thomasius, whereupon the countess 3704 I, XI | And I'll go with you, for, thorough Æsculapius as you are, there 3705 II, III | sweet-spoken, flattering, aping, thought-snatching, cajoling, empty-headed 3706 I, XI | full of hundred- or even thousand-florin bills."~ ~"Well, if you 3707 I, VIII | I am not afraid of that threat; and as to maledictions, 3708 I, XIII | ago. Her ladyship really threatened the other day that some 3709 II, XV | few minutes the shouts and threats were silenced, and the crowd 3710 II, XVI | was the quintessence of thriftiness. I told her that the house 3711 I, I | ice, the Alpine vegetation thrives. The whole valley is one 3712 II, VIII | The knife was at my throat literally; but she laughed 3713 II, VII | back to my heart with a throbbing sensation. A tingling noise 3714 II, XII | convulsions, and men in the throes of death, were strewn thickly 3715 II, XVI | dragged a monarch from his throne into captivity, had also 3716 II, XVI | and were filled with a throng of brokers and "matadores." 3717 II, XVI | go with a crowd that was thronging out - possibly the beaten 3718 II, XI | À Berlin!" loudest, when throngs of people crowded through 3719 I, X | who has no idea that if he throws a glowing tinder into a 3720 II, I | with acorns and hazelnuts; thrushes, blackbirds, nightingales, 3721 I, II | fiery tongues were greedily thrusting upward to devour their prey.~ ~ 3722 I, II | prayer-bands were upon his thumbs and wrists, and encircling 3723 II, VII | party! - without telling me! Thunder and lightning! this is no 3724 I, II | while on its roof fell, with thunderous violence, the awful shower 3725 I, I | guard came in to look at my ticket, and, pitying my lonely 3726 II, I | over to her companion.~ ~"Tiens! Ca m'embête!"~ ~To her 3727 II, XVI | I looked at him with tight-shut lips, giving vent to a slight " 3728 I, I | boy, with very red, thin, tightly-compressed lips, and great, melancholy 3729 II, VII | their robust waists from the tightly-laced silk bodices. Of course, 3730 I, X | that if he throws a glowing tinder into a barrel of gunpowder 3731 II, VII | a throbbing sensation. A tingling noise like the sound of 3732 I, VI | the grate threw a reddish tint over the surrounding objects, 3733 II, II | fond of liquor as any human tippler, and I really thought that 3734 II, VII | château everybody went on tiptoe, as usual when Diodora had 3735 II, VII | that of which she did not tire, but read it over and over 3736 I, IV | of his Bosnian policy. Of Tisza he entertained great hopes, 3737 I, XI | spoke of me, in a brilliant toast-speech, as of a newly risen star, 3738 II, XIV | bacon, and, slicing it up, I toasted it at the grate fire. Surely 3739 II, IV | cake had been cut and the toasts drunk, the guests retired, 3740 II, II | puffed a whole cloud of tobacco-smoke full in my face, and at 3741 II, XI | All day she would pine and toil, all night she would sigh 3742 II, XII | by these splinters. As we toiled, the hellish projectiles 3743 II, XVII | pride in the elegance of her toilette, and was jealously careful 3744 II, VII | us in the entry. Now they tolled the bell hurriedly and briefly, 3745 I, V | generous young man; and Tom, the negro, my best servant, 3746 I, I | the great rocks are giant tombstones, encircled by wreaths of 3747 II, XV | entrusted to it, as the tongueless stone lions on St. Mark' 3748 I, XII | was nothing but a broken tool - I, who might have been 3749 I, XII | drink wine, because I was no toper to enjoy drinking alone, 3750 I, II | the ill-fated pile, the topmost car - that containing the 3751 I, IV | nomenclature, customs, and topography of my own country and language? 3752 I, XII | afterward you will accept of the torchlight serenade, which your voters 3753 II, VII | wonderful apparatus will prove a tormenting executioner, not a healing 3754 II, IX | that a great ornamental tortoise-shell comb, of yellow hue, had 3755 I, V | she allowed it to become a torture. I was obliged to recount 3756 II, X | computed it, I made the total to be one million and twenty-five 3757 I, VI | fellow was simpering, and tottered drowsily to and fro. He 3758 I, XI | conscience, and nothing so tough and hardened as you. Come, 3759 II, XI | to a bride on her wedding tour from her husband. Now I 3760 | towards 3761 II, VIII | face, drying it with a soft towel. "Oh, you are quite handsome 3762 I, II | By this time the horrible tower was burning brightly, and 3763 II, XI | nothing! I had left no trace of my operations, nothing 3764 II, XIII | breastplates; the gunners cut the traces of the horses, jumped upon 3765 I, I | to protect the railroad track against another landslide.~ ~ 3766 I, II | young mother sat on the tracks, fondly hugging a plaid 3767 I, I | the Rossberg. A devastated tract of the globe it seems. Our 3768 I, V | ladies in hooped skirts and trailing brocade robes; no mail-clad, 3769 II, XVI | enough to show some exotic trait of dress or appearance to 3770 I, X | told that these men were traitors, who had filled offices 3771 II, XI | three waggons with strong Trakene horses for my own transport 3772 Note2 | Transcriber's Note:~ ~The following 3773 I, V | and for a moment I stood transfixed at the lovely and exquisite 3774 I, IX | me, and a slow and sweet transit from the cares and troubles 3775 II, I | German journalist had to translate an item on sea-turtles from 3776 I, IV | to be found; not even the translation of a Hungarian book could 3777 I, V | becoming oppressive, a fine, translucent film separated the bower 3778 II, XVII | ready to go with you to Transylvania to procure a divorce under 3779 II, X | 85; Lower-Austrian, 88; Transylvanian, 82, etc."~ ~This time we 3780 II, X | and good sense! And the trap was already laid for me, 3781 II, XIV | honneur" on my breast.~ ~"Trash!" I said, tearing it off, 3782 I, XII | party's views, and then you travel home again, and make your 3783 II, III | reader; so was I. She had travelled a good deal; so had I, and, 3784 II, VII | bride, in a dove-coloured travelling-dress, with a wreath of orange 3785 II, XVI | to get some tea. With the tray a newspaper was laid before 3786 II, X | so miserably cunning and treacherous. This is some evil dream, 3787 I, I | and noise of the train is tremendously increased, thundering as 3788 II, XIV | influenza-cold, and, yes, the tremor before a battle. But here, 3789 II, X | to me?" she asked, in a tremulus voice.~ ~I shook my head, 3790 II, X | document, fastened with tri-coloured tape, with a large official 3791 I, I | German Heinicke method a trial. That professes to teach 3792 II, X | revenge upon the woman who had tricked me pass by neglected. Had 3793 I, XI | Schmerling knew a good many fine tricks, and one of the prettiest 3794 II, XVI | porch, on all sides, great tricolours were hanging, with the legend " 3795 I, VIII | you know, and that's no trifle. It would be foolish to 3796 II, XVII | exultant admiration, of triumphant joy, of ecstatic delight.~ ~" 3797 I, X | Hungarian tricolour to immortal triumphs although his face was as 3798 I, III | As the shepherd at length trotted on and disappeared, that 3799 I, VII | in sore want of a pair of trousers - this poor fellow had yet 3800 II, VII | given orders that, after the trout, champagne should be served. 3801 II, XVI | questions, and open all trunks and valises for examination 3802 I, XII | doctor must be respected, trusted, even revered, like a priest. 3803 I, XI | and handed it over to the trustee.~ ~"Now you see what has 3804 II, IV | take the responsibility of trusting me with the dear child."~ ~" 3805 II, XVII | that love with the frank truthfulness of her nature - confessed 3806 II, II | denial of the fundamental truths of all religion also? Turn 3807 I, XIII | girl-rider cried out:~ ~"Tu y serais!" Then she beckoned 3808 I, I | might look into the great tube of the London Observatory, 3809 I, VII | of the village, in an old tumble-down shanty of his own, lived 3810 I, II | wrecked mass of carriages tumbled after, atop of each other, 3811 II, XV | street was very noisy, and a tumult of loud voices, shouts, 3812 I, I | intense darkness in the many tunnels, in which the roar and noise 3813 I, II | barricade, his logs doubled up Turk-fashion, sits a young painter with 3814 I, XI | Spanish, Italian, Danish, Turkish, or other foreign phrase, 3815 II, VII | standing by his side at this turning-point of his life, whereupon I 3816 I, VIII | to the fact. There was a turnkey at the little gate, and 3817 I, VI | the morning coffee à la Turque, and at five o'clock a cold 3818 I, IX | I returned to the narrow turret-room in which he had taken up 3819 II, I | which are in German called Turtel-tauben, and, as he did not want 3820 II, I | exactly understand what a turtle was; but he know of turtle-doves, 3821 I, III | of some guardian angel or tutelary spirit? In what am I different 3822 II, I | lordly forest and my small twenty-acre park! Red squirrels, gray 3823 I, IV | first-born, and she is not yet twenty-four. We have been married six 3824 I, VIII | together. There was a merry twinkle in his eye even after his 3825 I, XI | each other like the Siamese twins. And the man whom he thought 3826 I, II | and as I stumbled over the twisted and broken rails, that stood 3827 I, I | iron leviathan turns and twists itself like a Gordian knot; 3828 I, VII | assistant physician, and at two-and-thirty the newspapers spoke of 3829 II, VI | singular disclosure had made a twofold impression. My first feeling 3830 I, XII | spade, pruning, weeding, and tying up the twigs and branches, 3831 I, I | acquainted with a deaf and dumb type-setter, who had learned to talk 3832 Note2 | s Note:~ ~The following typographical errors in the original text 3833 II, VII | envelope the inscription, "Ibi, ubi, cito, citissime. N.B. Dr. 3834 I, IV | professor who teaches the Ugro-Finnish tongue, even if there were 3835 I, VII | Suabians or Germans, beer; the Ugro-Fins or Hungarians, wine; and 3836 II, XIII | resistance. If a Prussian Uhlan was seen far off on the 3837 I, IX | rich stones of the time of 'Ulászló.' The next contains all 3838 I, II | the catastrophe and the ultimate rescue. But what had meanwhile 3839 II, XV | while around him sticks and umbrellas were upraised against me 3840 II, III | baby; yet, in spite of her unacquaintance with novels and comedies, 3841 I, IX | difficult; and one who was unacquainted with the secret of this 3842 I, XI | the kind, and soon we were unanimously called "the Dioscuri," for 3843 I, X | most cases the latter was unavoidable, and these aliens, furious 3844 I, VI | took him up on his lap, unbuttoned his little boots, and pulled 3845 II, VII | tresses of raven hair were uncoiled and scattered in rich skeins 3846 II, XV | Paris; she had been very uncomfortable and ill at ease there.~ ~ ~ ~ 3847 I, XI | spot, and felt an almost unconquerable temptation to take the operating-knife 3848 II, VI | I had involuntarily and unconsciously tied that particular part 3849 II, VI | him, and put the money, uncounted, in my coat pocket. Then 3850 I, I | over-heated, and we had to uncouple the car and leave it behind. 3851 I, V | Her rich, dark hair was uncovered and wound around her head 3852 II, XVII | newspapers spoke of your undaunted courage, of your disinterested 3853 II, I | gardener. I had no intention of undeceiving them, and did not take off 3854 I, XI | florins. Do you think that underestimated? No? Well, here are his 3855 II, VII | or none who are able to undergo the process of having the 3856 I, IV | admitted whose luggage is undergoing examination by the customs 3857 II, XVI | My own residence had undergone a similar change. Like the 3858 I, II | furnace with its feeding coals undermost, and then the whole wrecked 3859 I, VI | s-broth").~ ~"And the countess understands how to prepare the old-fashioned 3860 I, X | one of my neighbours in an undertone. As the banished man passed 3861 II, XVII | persistence. Whatever I undertook was sure to succeed, and 3862 I, IX | receive at my hands the undiminished fortune which your grandfather 3863 I, XI | had done it, and could not undo it, as you might say.~ ~ 3864 I, XIII | so that our success was undoubted. In order to silence all 3865 II, XV | unpleasant visitors, who would undoubtedly have done harm to the furniture 3866 II, XVI | both of us, she could not undress before the stranger who 3867 I, VI | of the room.~ ~The father undressed the child, and put him to 3868 II, XVI | herself on the bed, without undressing, for, as we had only this 3869 II, XVII | have been an unnatural and undutiful mother," she said, in a 3870 II, III | sure to feel restless and uneasy, and persuaded myself that 3871 I, V | Now this commination, unexpected as it was from a lady of 3872 II, XIV | inward shudder; "I am quite unfamiliar with your civilised customs, 3873 I, VIII | that I am an unnatural or unfeeling father. I'll give you thir - 3874 I, XII | all, described in somewhat unflattering language, in the Hungarian 3875 II, XVII | Papa! Papa!") and a little unfledged cherub was peeping out from 3876 II, VIII | if you had only gone on, unforewarned, you would have come out 3877 II, XII | Marshal Douay's corps, but, unfortunately, I did not receive the privilege 3878 I, V | accident. Mr. Dumany is ungrudging in his charity, and ready 3879 II, XII | Quadrupedante putrem crepitu quatit ungula campum."~ ~Avoiding our 3880 I, III | refusing to talk. Was not such unheard-of obstinacy in a child of 3881 I, IV | compatriots, but wholly unintelligible and of very little use or 3882 I, III | on and disappeared, that unique, long-legged example of 3883 II, XVII | procure a divorce under the Unitarian laws."~ ~As I finished she 3884 II, I | meeting with another and uniting with it to form a rivulet, 3885 II, XIII | favourite chum from the University; but we had not seen each 3886 I, XII | something terribly cruel and unjust, in such a moral cudgelling 3887 II, III | for aunty is also very unkind to them. Only that is no 3888 | unlikely 3889 I, IX | is a picture-gallery of unlimited value; and then comes a 3890 I, IX | let me show you how to unlock it, for it is difficult; 3891 I, IX | into the garden, carefully unlocking and re-locking the door, 3892 II, II | steel blade. The moment that unlucky assertion had escaped me, 3893 II, VI | host would call him a rude, unmannered peasant; for he must remember 3894 I, VIII | admirable rudeness! Stay, you unmannerly specimen of honesty, who 3895 II, IV | As long as the girl is unmarried and a minor, my aunt takes 3896 I, X | declared that it was my unmistakable duty, as a Dumany and a 3897 II, XI | So we arrived in Paris unmolested; and the great crowds in 3898 I, I | conversation; hence restraint was unnecessary. I asked her if he was born 3899 II, VII | the coverlet slipped down unnoticed, and the lace nightgown, 3900 I, X | positively adhere to your unpatriotic resolution, and finally 3901 II, XV | him for ridding me of my unpleasant visitors, who would undoubtedly 3902 II, XI | the Prussians are caught unprepared. Bavaria will remain neutral, 3903 I, I | be helped, grumbling is unreasonable, so good-bye sleep and quiet, 3904 II, III | much as Countess Cenni's unruly activity; and Countess Flamma' 3905 I, II | the god of destruction was unsatisfied, and his fiery maw opened 3906 II, VII | Catholic, she could not marry unshriven. So she simpered and blushed 3907 II, VII | with the pressure of her unskilled hands on the outside of 3908 I, VI | as stately, solemn, and unsociable a meal as a funeral banquet, 3909 I, IV | know how to escape this unsought-for and unwelcome notoriety. 3910 I, VIII | of his back, and his long untrimmed beard flowed down to his 3911 I, VI | However, I have told you an untruth. I am yet a landed proprietor 3912 II, I | patient. These rings, rather unusual upon the finger of a common 3913 I, V | position, was not altogether unwarranted, and so I went on.~ ~As 3914 I, IV | escape this unsought-for and unwelcome notoriety. But if you accept 3915 II, XIV | smoke the cigarette and unwittingly destroy this last clue to 3916 I, IX | single meal of some heavy, unwonted food, one glass of liquor, 3917 II, XV | sticks and umbrellas were upraised against me with threatening 3918 I, VI | another revelation, and upset the other half of my fictitious 3919 I, II | coal-van had been turned upside down, and these had pulled 3920 II, VI | person whom we call "Potya ur" - "Mr. Parasite." He feeds 3921 II, XVI | compelled to leave her on urgent business. She did not ask 3922 I, VII | alive when brought to the urn, and the drummers announced 3923 I, VIII | are just as harmless and useless as blessings. The Frauenhofer 3924 II, VI | by other men's servants, uses other men's horses and carriages, 3925 I, VI | Budapest, in the Sándor Utcza Palace, the House of Commons."~ ~" 3926 II, XI | furnished myself with all utensils requisite for camp hospitals, 3927 I, II | their wits, and gave no utterance to the pain they felt. Only 3928 I, X | who after each of these utterances of "Dead," added the Slavonic 3929 I, VII | needed. The dying man stared vacantly into their faces when they 3930 II, II | and their proper remedies: vaccination, disinfection, prophylactics; 3931 II, IX | she was interrupted in her vagaries. At the sound of her laughter 3932 I, V | my heart ached with some vague and gloomy presentiment. 3933 II, XII | superiority of the Germans, vainly hoping that the report of 3934 I, VII | of taking leave of this vale of care and sorrow; but 3935 II, XVI | and open all trunks and valises for examination by the police.~ ~ 3936 I, I | extending across great valleys, chasms, and precipices, 3937 I, XIII | bear-hunting with her and show his valour. My woods are full of bears. 3938 I, IX | workmanship consisted of a set of valueless shirt-studs and a watch 3939 I, XIII | of wine I felt the gloom vanish from me entirely. Siegfried 3940 I, IV | mirth and sweetness had vanished. He looked around, and then 3941 II, XII | trees, and firing from these vantage-grounds. Only the Zouaves and the 3942 I, XI | cafes, and all sorts of variety-shows and music-halls. I had lived 3943 II, XVII | not mistaken, his name was Varjassy. I returned to Brussels, 3944 II, II | beetle-wings. The cetonias vary in colour: some of them 3945 I, XI | disappoint them cruelly."~ ~"Vederemo!" he said. "The Devil is 3946 I, I | heavenly lightning to draw our vehicles and carry our messages, 3947 II, XV | boys, market women, and veiled "ladies" in flashy dresses 3948 I, V | brocaded draperies, evidently veiling the entrance into some other 3949 I, XIII | all three alike, with blue veils tied around their high beavers 3950 II, VII | mysterious disorder in the veins, lymphs, and nerves reveals 3951 II, VII | called to rub this soft, velvety, odorous flesh, the fascinating, 3952 II, IX | Before her was a little Venetian mosaic table, and on it 3953 II, XV | on St. Mark's Square in Venice."~ ~"And what will be the 3954 I, XII | must remember. If you offer venison and champagne to your electors, 3955 II, VIII | loved again; and could the venomous tongue of a jealous woman 3956 II, XVI | tight-shut lips, giving vent to a slight "H - m, h - 3957 II, I | that we had time enough for ventilating academic questions afterward.~ ~ 3958 II, VII | might have been lost by the Venus of Milo and found by this, 3959 II, V | I repeated her own words verbally, instead of giving her a 3960 II, IX | a humble shepherd on the Verhovina."~ ~I was sorry for this 3961 I, XI | the very person for her. I verily believe that the two little 3962 II, IV | read Flammarion, or one of Verne's harmless fictions, in 3963 I, XII | write in hexameters, in such verses I would compose the "Æneid" 3964 II, XVII | sedative. There are different versions afloat as to how we got 3965 II, VII | the chapel, and found the vestry-clerk and a boy ministrant waiting 3966 II, XII | from beside us, and the veteran sergeant at my elbow said -~ ~" 3967 I, VIII | want to be a barber or a veterinary surgeon, or one of those 3968 I, X | What folly it was of you to vex and excite this blockhead 3969 II, II | now he turned in comical vexation to me, and said -~ ~"Friend, 3970 I, XII | inn-keeper to sell cheap viands? You will have nothing to 3971 II, XII | French had invariably been victors and masters of the field; 3972 I, VIII | after the catastrophe of Világos he was seized and imprisoned 3973 I, I | happened at night, when the villagers were all asleep, and not 3974 I, I | and in the landslide four villages were buried. This happened 3975 II, XVII | become just such a dare-devil villain as the man who has caused 3976 II, XVI | Chateau Lafitte, Grand Vin Mumm, etc.~ ~"Wonderful 3977 II, IV | ancestors in honour of St. Vincent de Paul. In that chapel 3978 I, IV | I know how to describe a vine-embowered cottage, or even a thatch-roofed 3979 II, XII | defend themselves among the vineyards and the thickets. The soil 3980 II, II | face of Flamma had coloured violently, and that Cenni pouted and 3981 II, IX | night - a look from the violet eyes of Flamma.~ ~I rose 3982 I, XII | already. If I had the gift of Virgilius Maro, and could speak or 3983 I, X | course, to my clean-shaven visage. Nobody in the whole congregation 3984 II, XIV | three months, and she had visibly changed since then.~ ~To 3985 II, IX | IX.~ ~WHO IS THE VISITOR?~ ~I waited impatiently 3986 I, XI | him.~ ~"You can't pay any visits to your neighbours until 3987 I, XIII | figure, but full of nervous vitality and energy. Opposite to 3988 II, IV | am a libertine, a frivol viveur, etc., and she won't take 3989 I, II | open, and he is making a vivid sketch of the sensational 3990 I, IV | a human monstrosity and void of all natural feeling? 3991 I, XI | were delivered in a perfect Volapük - that is, in a medley of 3992 Note1 | several hundred successful volumes. At the age of twenty-three 3993 II, XII | stated that I had come, as a voluntary apprentice, to aid in the 3994 I, I | disagreeable to the lady, I volunteered to close it. She accepted 3995 II, VII | appeared at once in soft, voluptuous sighs of relief, deep and 3996 I, VII | deceased, only he is not a voter, as he does not pay taxes; 3997 II, XV | XV.~ ~VOX POPULI.~ ~The street was 3998 I, I | the way for these waters - Vulcan or Neptune? Or was it laid 3999 II, XIII | the wounded officer on the waggon, I jumped on horseback, 4000 I, I | Helios Apollo could listen to Wagner's operas, and Zeus Jupiter 4001 II, VII | gloves, as did their robust waists from the tightly-laced silk


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