Chapter

 1     I|        such is the streakiness of life."~ ~Mr. Peter Bús did not
 2     I|           lead such a patriarchal life in these parts that they
 3     I|            thought fit to come to life again, and, springing from
 4     I|        thousand things. His whole life is an absurdity. He only
 5     I|          a wise thing once in his life. When I was at the very
 6     I|         was the first time in his life that any one had dared to
 7    II|           to me as is the mode of life of the greatest Spanish
 8    II|            We who have to do with life assurance transactions are
 9    II|         am regarding your uncle's life just as if it had been insured
10    II|      years, suddenly springs into life again, like some tenacious
11    II|           no harm happens to your life."~ ~"How?"~ ~"I mean to
12    II|         which might endanger your life."~ ~"And I suppose I must
13    II|            you preferred to enjoy life, why, then, Paris is large
14   III|        accustomed to this sort of life that you'll find it a little
15   III|        seen him dead-drunk in his life.~ ~On the arrival of these
16   III|          lived among them all his life.~ ~Meanwhile the eternal
17    IV|          and earth that his whole life would henceforth be devoted
18    IV|      adopt some wholesome mode of life, and they, weeping sorely,
19    IV|         to lead a new and orderly life, that every one would do
20    IV|      between us, and your mode of life has been such as to make
21    IV|        profligates, from living a life of wretchedness and shame,
22     V|           an insurance office for life, with one half of which
23     V|      about, whose sole mission in life seems to be to make such
24    VI|         to the last moment of her life.[Pg 133]~ ~Poor Alexander!~ ~
25    VI|          such minutiæ of his past life.~ ~"Then this letter will
26    VI|           It is all one to me. My life is no more precious to me
27    VI|        ruptured, and that all his life long he would be hard of
28   VII|           that he had done in his life so far but a small matter
29   VII|        God grant your honour long life, which I wish you with all
30   VII|         so much as another day of life.~ ~On the third day the
31  VIII|      condemned to a cloister-like life, and cannot so much as step
32  VIII|         enough to make me live my life over again. I am not superstitious,
33  VIII|          arm she can wander along life's quiet path to the very
34  VIII|        more rigorous years of her life have only suppressed, not
35  VIII|           joy of a happy domestic life which I have never had yet!"~ ~
36  VIII|    completely changed his mode of life now."~ ~"Ah, my dear guardian,
37    IX|       upon earth, and, after this life, all the joys of heaven!
38    IX|           I paint monsters; it is life that I describe.~ ~Mrs.
39    IX|         be amply provided for for life. And what was to be given
40    IX|        had ever told a lie in his life, and only urgent necessity
41    IX|       much about the same time of life. I know very well that he
42    IX|           sot of a husband, and a life of misery, care, and anxiety.
43    IX| disagreeable features of domestic life. And the girl knew quite
44    IX|           disgrace? Pooh, such is life!~ ~Fanny, horror-stricken,
45    IX|         saw a handsomer man in my life. What eyebrows! And his
46    IX|   pleasant man he is! Never in my life have I seen such a figure
47    IX|         themselves of the joys of life, wither the quickest - - ~"
48    IX|         God, the one object of my life will be how to make you
49     X|           that Mr. Varga, for the life of him, could not help drawing
50     X|           shoulder."~ ~In all his life Mr. Varga had never had
51     X|        crosses of a hard domestic life; and they all find in her
52     X|          was a man disgusted with life, who troubled himself very
53    XI|          if she had lived all her life in the castles of countesses.~ ~
54  XIII|         was the first time in his life that he had seen this woman.
55  XIII|          ill; for a long time her life was even despaired of. Kárpáthy
56  XIII|       longer.~ ~So Fanny regained life and consciousness; she no
57  XIII|           the whole course of her life. What was he, what had she
58  XIII|       myself what an entirely new life we'll begin to live there
59    XV|           him. He leads a regular life, and no doubt his doctors
60   XVI|          the petty necessities of life as ordinary men, and do
61   XVI|       tender emotions, and indeed life, practical life, makes possible
62   XVI|        and indeed life, practical life, makes possible and comprehensible
63  XVII|        which is bound up with the life of the flowers! Every flower
64  XVII|          Every flower has its own life, desires, inclinations,
65  XVII|        wife - upper-class married life. Nevertheless, the ashen-purple
66  XVII|         the flower shows that its life is happy."~ ~Here Rudolf
67  XVII|           abandoned me. In all my life, no man's image has been
68  XVII|           did you make it come to life again? Have you not observed
69  XVII|           a single moment all her life, and that moment was when
70  XVII|      breast.~ ~How long and weary life must be to her from henceforth!~ ~
71    XX|        whom he worshipped both in life and in death, and to whom,
72   XXI|           me from this transitory life to His glory, and therefore
73   XXI|           my arrangements in this life; it has been my first thought
74   XXI|        shall quit this transitory life, when I am dead, I desire
75   XXI|           can read in the book of life and death, or tell which
76   XXI|         sins against her! May his life make manifest what ours
77   XXI|           bitterest moments of my life. I mean my nephew, who was
78   XXI|        not likely to take his own life, for libertines do not readily
79   XXI|            pray rather for my new life. And now let us go to my
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