Chapter

 1     I|        what he wanted.~ ~"All I want," said he, "is a dish of
 2     I|         the name of the thing I want."~ ~"What do you want, sir?"~ ~"
 3     I|         I want."~ ~"What do you want, sir?"~ ~"That thing that
 4     I|        that's it. A forspont! I want a forspont immediately."~ ~"
 5     I|         and let him know that I want to sleep in his room. I
 6     I|       to help you. I also am in want of cash. I also squander
 7     I|         payment in advance! You want me to part with my very
 8     I|        day. I suppose you don't want to carry it away with you
 9     I| furniture till morning? I shall want to use it."~ ~"Impossible.
10    II|     dear money monarch? I don't want bad news - tell me only
11    II|        pay your debts. You will want at least twice that amount
12    II|    whiskers.~ ~"The assurance I want from you," said the banker,
13   III|         could use no other. "We want more pomp here. Who ever
14   III|       of the victor.~ ~"I don't want that!" cried the vanquished
15   III|         quivered with rage. "We want to prove which of us two
16    IV|     stage all the time. I don't want to tell you what my views
17    IV|   pressed her, that she did not want to go to Aunt Teresa, they
18    IV|      round her finger, "I don't want to go to Aunt Teresa," she
19    IV|   determined voice -~ ~"I don't want to go to Aunt Teresa!"~ ~"
20    IV|     Teresa!"~ ~"What? You don't want to go, eh?"~ ~"I want to
21    IV|         t want to go, eh?"~ ~"I want to stay here with my mother
22     V|     tutelary deity, who did not want himself to be known to her.
23    VI|       to take to wife. So now I want your advice as to what sort
24    VI|         to frighten you. I only want to know your name."~ ~"My
25   VII|         fell dead in heaps from want of fodder."~ ~"Ah, you see
26   VII|    knowing what to answer.~ ~"I want to know," continued Kárpáthy,
27   VII|       eyes.~ ~"Oh, so thou dost want thy dear father to choose
28  VIII|       heard me out. Look now! I want Abellino to wait in vain
29  VIII|         the hour of my death. I want my estates not to go to
30  VIII| Abellino's calculations - for I want to draw blood, I want to
31  VIII|         I want to draw blood, I want to wound him to the very
32  VIII|       were a horse-race. Now, I want to put a stop to this base
33  VIII|    suicide out of the Danube. I want to make my ward happy, but
34  VIII|        point. Look now! I don't want to marry your ward against
35  VIII|      against her will. I simply want you to lay my proposal before
36  VIII|     will be sent here - I don't want to carry my basket home
37  VIII|        you admire my cunning? I want to have an income without
38  VIII|        said he.~ ~"What? Do you want to remain wifeless all your
39  VIII|       happy?"~ ~"Then you don't want to marry him?" asked the
40  VIII|     Give me pleasure, indeed! I want you to please yourself,
41  VIII|      serious business, you only want to make fun of it. Now,
42    IX|      true, however, that he did want to get to the house through
43    IX|       he would not leave you in want - he would provide for you,
44    IX|        Pg 220]~ ~"Good night; I want to go to sleep," stammered
45    IX|         Boltay. "Where does she want to go?"~ ~"She wants to
46    IX|       mine there which I do not want my sisters to throw away
47    IX|     dear uncle," said Fanny; "I want to write a few lines to
48     X|       was himself wearing.~ ~"I want you to be so good as to
49  XIII|        look.~ ~"No, no; I don't want you to remain here. Go and
50  XIII|       if you don't like it, and want something more handsome,
51    XV|        but you must do what you want yourself. The Kárpáthys
52   XVI|         like such witticisms. I want you to give an account of
53   XVI|      night, dear Rudolf. If you want to go and sleep, send in
54  XVII|           Come, come, don't you want to meet your friend?" insisted
55 XVIII|     desperate murmur.~ ~"If you want to kill or be killed, my
56   XIX|     about."~ ~"Yes; but I don't want you to hear what they are
57   XXI|         is alone wanting, and I want nothing added to the inscription:
58   XXI|   before the presence of God. I want my son to be better than
59   XXI|         to be a beggar, to feel want, to beg his bread at other
60   XXI|     keep anybody from suffering want. But this ducat he himself
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