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4002 II, XVI | the news.~ ~I begged the waiter to let me have one of the 4003 II, XVI | there except the staff of waiters. Everybody else had gone 4004 II, VIII | to keep me all night in a waking dream, in a transport of 4005 I, XII | second I paced the garden walks in a furious rage; the third 4006 II, II | Greek churches, in a large wall-painting, and there he is represented 4007 II, XVII | stealing, decorating the wall-tapestry with rings of golden red, 4008 I, IX | wood. The main entrance was walled up; the middle portion of 4009 II, III | There was the story of a walled-up wife and murdered lovers, 4010 II, VII | the Capuchin in Schiller's Wallenteins's Camp?"~ ~The man stared 4011 II, VII | I said, taking out the wallet with Siegfried's bills, 4012 Note2 | I, Chapter VIII, "Yes, I wan you immediately" has been 4013 II, XVII | stranger and an outcast, wandering to and fro for fear that 4014 I, VII | to be endured!" was the war-cry of the subordinate drummers. 4015 I, III | think myself the chosen ward of some guardian angel or 4016 I, IV | well have afforded me a warmer recognition. Indeed, I had 4017 II, VII | best. An angel had come to warn me, and had given me a weapon 4018 II, XVII | never hate; it was love warring against contempt, and contempt 4019 II, XII | old man's practice in many wars. The French had invariably 4020 II, VIII | the moral, that you were wary of the caprices of aristocratic 4021 II, XIV | will have it that heaven washes away with tears the blood 4022 I, I | the lamps of the little watch-houses fly past like so many jack-o'- 4023 I, V | that terrible being that watches us so relentlessly, and 4024 I, III | the insensible restored, watchmen and travellers were interrogated 4025 II, XI | be something to tear that water-nymph on the Vernöczy crest from 4026 I, XIII | for them. We have a lot of water-shoots in our garden."~ ~We had 4027 II, VII | Ostend, or some other remote watering-place. After an election campaign, 4028 I, VIII | rather alarming; but he waved the document away with his 4029 II, XVII | throw yourself upon the waves of life, drink deep of the 4030 I, XII | broke the rose-coloured wax, and drew out a tiny piece 4031 I, I | boy, who looked like some waxen image or big doll.~ ~The 4032 I, VIII | melancholy. Neither am I weak-minded or nervous, and you need 4033 II, III | to confess your physical weaknesses to a male physician, yet 4034 I, I | work, some giant spider's web, extending across great 4035 II, X | that I left you on your wedding-day without a shilling in your 4036 II, X | concrete instance, to spend the wedding-night in a study, making pecuniary 4037 I, VIII | order that no poisonous weed might be consumed by her, 4038 I, XII | shovel, and spade, pruning, weeding, and tying up the twigs 4039 I, XII | artichoke, overgrown with vile weeds. All at once I found myself 4040 I, IV | paper we have, daily and weekly, will be sure to pester 4041 II, XVII | her mouth with my kisses; weeping in the excess of my love 4042 I, II | superhuman force to lift the iron weight above, to break a way at 4043 II, VI | as cordial as ever, and welcomed me as a dear friend. "Well, 4044 II, V | be the loudest and least well-behaved of the set. The bride will 4045 I, IV | King's residence - a large, well-built, and rather comfortable 4046 II, XVII | William James. He was a well-formed, healthy child, and I myself 4047 I, X | traitor's chair," said a well-meaning man at my elbow; but I smiled 4048 I, I | American nabob, with an escort well-nigh princely, was travelling 4049 I, VI | they were spoken in clear, well-pronounced Hungarian.~ ~I gazed at 4050 I, VII | occupied the position of a well-qualified assistant physician, and 4051 I, VI | couch and gave it a cosy and well-shaded effect.~ ~We had hardly 4052 I, IV | husband was a large-made, well-shaped, and distinguished-looking 4053 II, XVII | in a drawer a small and well-worn note-book. I supposed she 4054 II, VII | they were dairy and garden wenches, and the only language they 4055 II, XII | to meet them. The strong west wind was blowing clouds 4056 II, II | as, for instance, some Western nations who worship him 4057 I, XIII | carefully wrapped them up with wet moss; and all the way I 4058 I, IV | observed that although American wheat was sure to inundate the 4059 I, I | his mill. So long as the wheel turns, I sleep on; but the 4060 I, II | cannon-ball to that of a wheelbarrow, descended upon the train, 4061 II, XII | second shot. The Prussians wheeled swiftly, and hussars, battery 4062 II, XII | regiment divided itself, wheeling to right and left; behind 4063 II, XVI | and smiled mischievously; whereat I shrugged my shoulders, 4064 II, I | lake, and two tiny little wherries lay ready for a boating 4065 I, IV | even if there were some whimsical parent who wished that his 4066 I, IV | flush, and he wore side whiskers, but no moustache. His head 4067 I, X | right. Then there was a whispering and consulting and questioning, 4068 I, XI | played with each other their whist, their games of chess or 4069 II, IV | knees, while I blew the whistle he had brought me. During 4070 I, I | stopping, the locomotive whistles, the lamps of the little 4071 I, XII | cast the stones are not a whit better than their victim. 4072 I, V | of them. No farthingaled, white-wigged ladies in hooped skirts 4073 | whither 4074 I, IV | the acquaintance of two whole-souled and intelligent gentlemen."~ ~" 4075 I, I | measles, scarlet-fever, whooping-cough, and such like maladies 4076 II, X | demon quite as cunning and wicked as their hoofed and horned 4077 I, IX | personal safety at all times. Wickedness has not died out of the 4078 I, V | marble-white face, her large wide-open eyes, gave her the look 4079 I, II | made a good-sized breach, widening the opening of the window; 4080 I, VII | poultry-dealer (who was a widower without any family) did 4081 I, III | wives and children, now widows and orphans, abandoned to 4082 II, XII | dashed bravely on, shouting wildly, and giving the enemy's 4083 I, XI | said, "my uncle has indeed willed away his ready money to 4084 II, XIII | and hang yourself on that willow, and there is an end of 4085 II, I | girl was a tall, slender, willow-like figure, with raven hair 4086 II, I | broad lake, with silvery willows on the nearer side, and 4087 II, XVI | severely wounded, and General Wimpffen has taken command in his 4088 I, I | according to the serpentine windings of the road. I looked at 4089 II, XVII | that Quixotic fight against windmills, and said to my own familiar 4090 I, I | little face pressed to the window-pane and the tiny hand never 4091 I, XIII | any public restaurants or wine-shops. Siegfried told me that 4092 II, XVII | little heads and trying the winglets.~ ~"Reveille is sounded," 4093 II, XVI | meaning of the mysterious winking and smiling and hemming, 4094 II, VI | his losses; but, when a winner, he complacently pockets 4095 II, V | to gamble until he either wins or loses a fortune, generally 4096 II, XVII | give up everything, and wipe out all memory of myself. 4097 I, II | stood upright like bent wires, and stooped over the bulwark, 4098 I, IX | for me and of his great wisdom. Had he not stipulated such 4099 I, VII | furnish all parties with the wished-for fluid, according to individual 4100 I, II | front of him. He gazed up wistfully, and then all at once he 4101 II, VI | for he needs them. His wit is his only resource, his 4102 II, IV | too gentle and too noble withal to injure a woman. So good-bye 4103 I, I | wanted to kiss them, the boy withdrew his hands with a quick gesture 4104 I, VIII | with a single touch of his withered hands, could create or destroy 4105 II, VI | have come to. I should have withheld your property from you until 4106 II, XVII | my other children, if I withhold a mother's love from this 4107 II, IV | telescopes in the house? I have witnessed the last interesting scene 4108 I, II | frightened out of their wits, and gave no utterance to 4109 I, IV | allusion to the Hungarian witticism that when we speak of Hungarian 4110 II, X | of my corporal death, and woe to her who has driven me 4111 II, XIII | Weissenburg came Spicheren, then Wörth. Everywhere the German force 4112 I, IX | housekeeper; but I know womankind. In less than half a year 4113 I, I | break through the rocky womb of his great mountains? 4114 I, IV | dress. He was altogether a wonderfully nice fellow.~ ~When the 4115 I, V | bower, with honeysuckle, woodbine, and other blooming and 4116 II, III | cajoling, empty-headed wooers my aunt calls monkeys, and 4117 II, IV | the greater part of the wooing, was short and successful, 4118 I, II | There she sat, caressing the woollen bundle, and in a low voice 4119 I, XII | All at once I found myself working away with garden-knife, 4120 I, X | Bakács, there portrayed, had worn moustaches, although they 4121 II, XVII | her engaged with the same worn-looking note-book that I had already 4122 II, X | but that! Help me, thou worser self, thou Devil in my own 4123 I, IV | fear that of etiquette the worst.~ ~But Mr. Dumany did not 4124 I, III | lost ones? In what better, worthier than they? And if not, why 4125 I, IX | found proved to be so many worthless pieces of parchment. The 4126 II, XVII | ought to have known my own worthlessness better, and not yielded 4127 II, I | invitation for breakfast.~ ~"Wouldn't you rather shave before 4128 I, I | graduated from college as senior wrangler."~ ~"Yes," she said. "But 4129 I, XIII | Morocco" roses and carefully wrapped them up with wet moss; and 4130 I, VI | came in. She wore a white wrapper, covered with costly lace 4131 II, VII | travelling-dress, with a wreath of orange flowers in her 4132 I, I | tombstones, encircled by wreaths of white flowers meet for 4133 I, V | misfortune!" she sighed, wringing her hands. "Why, that boy 4134 I, VIII | least. He was as dry, as wrinkled, and as white as when I 4135 I, II | around the unhappy woman's wrist, her despairing gaze fixed 4136 I, II | were upon his thumbs and wrists, and encircling his forehead. 4137 I, IV | me in my weak point - a writer's curiosity - and I gave 4138 I, II | behind her back, she foaming, writhing, and cursing. I ask indignantly, " 4139 I, X | The reverend gentleman was wrong. I was not a bull, but an 4140 II, XVII | and now I see how I have wronged you in accusing you of greed. 4141 I, III | brethren and a sense of their wrongs, why should I in this fatal 4142 I, IX | coat-of-arms hewn in stone, wrought in iron, carved in wood. 4143 II, XIV | XIV.~ ~HOME! SWEET HOME!~ ~It 4144 II, XVI | XVI.~ ~DAME FORTUNE.~ ~It took 4145 I, XIII | girl-rider cried out:~ ~"Tu y serais!" Then she beckoned 4146 II, IV | change my dress, for my yacht is waiting, and I shall 4147 II, II | with many ceremonies. The Yakoots and Chuckches believe in 4148 II, I | the Vernöczys had to pay yearly about twenty-five thousand 4149 I, II | chants his prayers, loudly yelling, or muttering low, as the 4150 I, II | of tongues, of despairing yells, hysterical sobs, heart-rending 4151 I, IX | the soil also, and it will yield you more than the twelve 4152 II, XVII | worthlessness better, and not yielded to a flattering self-conceit. 4153 I, IX | those pipes on the shelf yonder. You asked me if I was a 4154 I, VIII | I was a lean, overgrown youngster of sixteen. I was compelled 4155 I, XIII | One of them was a real Zenobia figure: tall of stature, 4156 I, I | to Wagner's operas, and Zeus Jupiter might look into 4157 I, IV | will find Munkácsy genres, Zichy aquarelles, a Benczur, and 4158 I, IX | lifted the lapel of his long zrinyi dolmány (old-fashioned Hungarian


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