Chapter

 1     I|        favourite greyhound, his gipsy jester, and his parasitical
 2     I|         Pg 18]~ ~Meanwhile, the gipsy jester had poked out his
 3     I|         your pardon," cried the gipsy, "but that is my kinsman,
 4     I|         And thus, surrounded by gipsy, heydukes, jester, peasant-girls,
 5     I|      hundred florins," said the gipsy, scratching his curly poll.~ ~
 6     I| blood-coloured banknotes.~ ~The gipsy squinted with half an eye
 7     I|         Let us see then!"~ ~The gipsy thereupon unbuttoned the
 8     I|    mouse had disappeared.~ ~The gipsy could not speak, but one
 9     I|       merriment ceased, for the gipsy all at once began to turn
10     I|        and began to fill up the gipsy's throat with half a bottle
11     I|      comfort and compensate the gipsy on his return from Charon'
12     I|      poet beginning to call the gipsy "my lord," while the gipsy
13     I|      gipsy "my lord," while the gipsy metaphorically buttonholed
14     I|         topic of the mouse, the gipsy suddenly put his hand to
15     I|       his word. They seized the gipsy, who never ceased laughing,
16     I|     chair from beneath him. The gipsy kicked and struggled, but
17     I|       for you."~ ~And while the gipsy flung himself on the ground
18     I|      thee."~ ~And, in fact, the gipsy never moved a limb. There
19     I|        of a professional[Pg 31] gipsy fiddler, at the same time
20     I|        anew.~ ~"Ah! ce drôle de gipsy!" said the stranger, trying
21     I|        to free himself from the gipsy's embraces. "That's quite
22     I|    wiped away all traces of the gipsy's kisses with his pocket-handkerchief,
23     I|       with amazement, while the gipsy went down on all fours and
24   III|        him, still less upon the gipsy minstrels behind his back;
25   III|        Martin?"~ ~"Yes. Let the gipsy musicians strike up my tune
26   III|       them came a cart with the gipsy musicians, roaring out Martin'
27   III|        the joke of dressing the gipsy Vidra in a splendid costume
28   III| perceived that there was only a gipsy inside it, whereupon the
29   VII|      folk-ballads to music; the gipsy primas bought up all the
30   VII|       made him believe that the gipsy Vidra was the cantor; and
31   VII|         expression; he told the gipsy that when he got drunk he
32   VII|   red-breeched, heaven-ascended gipsy fiddlers, dance the Kálla
33   VII|      old heyduke, and Vidra the gipsy, were the only persons who
34  VIII|    doorstep. At other times old gipsy women sneaked into the courtyard
35   XII|      musical accompaniment, the gipsy band proceeding from window
36 Words|      Primás, the conductor of a gipsy band.~ ~Puszta, the wilderness,
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