Chapter

 1     I|             Then he sat him down in front of his door, and, lolling
 2     I|         midst.~ ~The waggon went in front, the carriage behind, so
 3     I|       appear to be occupied, in the front seat two ambiguous looking
 4     I|       humorous greyhound raised his front paw and passed it over the
 5     I|             the shafts and three in front, and each of the three had
 6     I|             the postillion march in front with the carriage lamp,
 7     I|          boots, and were slit up in front so as to allow them to be
 8     I|       little peasant girls dance in front of him with a couple of
 9     I|       protruding one of his legs in front of him, and beating time
10    II|            a heap of newspapers. In front of the banker, on a little
11   III|            Nagy-Kun-Madaras, and in front of them, with a long hazel-wood
12   III|          back; only when he came in front of the door of any burgher
13   III|          way towards the fields. In front trotted two[Pg 64] sworn
14   III|          other horse half a head in front of him, would bite at it
15   III|              overtake the horses in front, adorned with green branches
16   III|            spur their horses to the front at the outset, only to fall
17   III|         those who were galloping in front of him, and as often as
18   III|           already standing there in front of the flag when he came
19   III|           while the bull flew on in front. By this time it had lost
20   III|           nose and mouth, its whole front flaked with foam, its tongue
21    VI|          the street, and stopped in front of Boltay's house.~ ~Fanny,
22    VI|            complimented Abellino in front of the green table in the
23    VI|           leaves up into the air in front of him, and riddled them
24   VII|            has been holding out his front paw for ever so long?"~ ~"
25   VII| accompaniment of Greek fire, in the front room."~ ~"But why in the
26   VII|            room."~ ~"But why in the front room, and not rather in
27  VIII|           handsome carriage stop in front of his house, and a heyduke
28     X|            Flora had sent her on in front while she lingered behind
29  XIII|           outside a village, and in front of it a pleasure-house had
30  XIII|              sending the dogs on in front. The ladies waved their
31  XIII|             He trotted leisurely in front, not because he could not
32  XIII|            about a hundred paces in front of them, and accelerating
33  XIII|          taken unawares, stopped in front of him, snarling viciously,
34  XIII|      solitary foxhound, came to the front, and showed what he could
35   XVI|           the ball, were walking in front of them, arm-in-arm. How
36    XX|      wrapped in a simple mantle; in front, a peasant, in a sheepskin
37    XX|            sending his escort on in front, turned aside, slowly wading
38   XXI|          read. To me it is holy. In front of the[Pg 346] bed are her
39   XXI|            round the round table in front of the witnesses.~ ~When
40   XXI|            all the candles piled in front of him. He knew why.~ ~"
41   XXI|           of.~ ~The priest stood in front of the table on which the
42  XXII|        folded across his breast, in front of him his wife's portrait
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