Chapter

 1     I|    were beside the shafts and three in front, and each of the
 2     I|     in front, and each of the three had jangling bells around
 3     I|      carry along with him the three personages who chiefly ministered
 4     I|     his parasitical poet, all three of whom made a nice little
 5     I|    the lower end of the table three camp-stools were placed,
 6     I|   placed, and on them sat the three favourites, the jester,
 7     I|    appetite by watching these three creatures eat, and by degrees[
 8     I|     had striven uselessly for three long hours to move it from
 9     I| himself at full length across three chairs, and began to whistle
10     I|        He found he could hire three good houses for it in the
11    II|       the properties of these three gentlemen at home are in
12    II|       undigested debt of some three hundred thousand francs
13    II|      straight.~ ~"You require three hundred thousand francs,"
14    II| mourning for my dear departed three hundred thousand francs.
15   III|     else's conveyance. Number three was Lörincz Berki, the most
16   III|     moved his whip. Only when three hundred paces had been traversed
17   III|      utter a loud cry, and in three bounds was ahead of the
18   III|       brother!"~ ~By the time three quarters of the course was
19   III|      the stranger winning all three races.~ ~The mortars were
20   III|       a man. He could take up three bushel sacks of wheat with
21    IV|       very week she purchased three hundred florins' worth of
22    IV|     be considerably more than three hundred florins. Aunt Teresa
23    IV|     He still possessed two or three acquaintances whom he had
24    IV|     was a pater-familias with three sons and two daughters.~ ~
25    IV|       gives more trouble than three boys. I should not refuse
26     V|      THE TEMPTER IN CHURCH.~ ~Three years had passed since Fanny
27     V|       with Aunt Teresa. Those three years had a great influence
28     V|     and anxieties of the last three years, for Fanny was now
29     V|  devote every year the sum of three thousand florins to enable
30     V|   happy also. I will give you three thousand florins every month,
31     V|       as usual, given her the three thousand florins for the
32    VI|      coin, florin for florin, three thousand down in one lump,
33    VI|    count. There are one, two, three, four, five, six thousand
34    VI|           Yes, I did."~ ~"And three years ago you met three
35    VI|       three years ago you met three Hungarian gentlemen in the
36    VI|     riddled them with bullets three times running. This he did
37   VII|       standing before him, at three paces' distance, and bowed
38   VII|       as old as they are. All three have grown up together,
39   VII|   have grown up together, all three have grown old together;
40   VII|    could have hit them off in three strokes, only the colouring
41   VII|      the gipsies present blew three loud flourishes on their
42   VII| patriarchs, side by side with three and thirty red-breeched,
43   VII|    one by one.~ ~"One - two - three! Not one of you has much
44  VIII|    removed the table, and the three remained together alone.~ ~
45    IX|     your portrait in at least three hundred different ways,
46    IX|   rate of interest upon it is three thousand six hundred florins.
47    IX|       now I would ask you all three, my friends, to grant me
48    IX|      their own verses; two or three newspaper correspondents,
49    XI|   mixed society, where two or three young girls at least must
50  XIII|     and he was her husband.~ ~Three prizes had been fixed for
51  XIII|      The company divided into three parts, forming a centre
52  XIII|       fox - nay, two and even three would be no match for him.
53  XIII|      limping and stumbling on three legs. Every one fancied
54   XVI|    among friends, to at least three boxes on the ears. I remember
55   XVI|      my fault," said he. "For three hours I have not been near
56   XVI|       near you, therefore for three days I will not quit your
57   XVI|       and pulled it violently three times.~ ~The maid entered.~ ~"
58  XVII|     dinner-table did they all three meet again.~ ~Kárpáthy himself
59  XVII|       here is a happy family, three husbands and three wives,
60  XVII|    family, three husbands and three wives, each husband close
61  XVII|       she said. She traversed three or four rooms without perceiving
62    XX|      was to be seen in two or three of the windows, and only
63   XXI|     feeling has come over me. Three days ago, a strange sort
64   XXI|      that have died; then the three among these virgins whom
65   XXI|      count up. I only know of three to whom I can really give
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