Chapter

 1    IV|          go and have dinner with Aunt Teresa?"~ ~Now, when this
 2    IV|         this reached the ears of Aunt Teresa, who fancied that
 3    IV|          Meyer resolved to visit Aunt Teresa that very day, and
 4    IV|      than three hundred florins. Aunt Teresa was certainly well-informed.~ ~
 5    IV|         knocked together. It was Aunt Teresa!~ ~The old spinster,
 6    IV|        Papa Meyer thereupon drew Aunt Teresa still further away.
 7    IV|       Meyer, when he did address Aunt Teresa, tried to assume
 8    IV|           There was something in Aunt Teresa's threats which might
 9    IV|          against that meddlesome Aunt Teresa, and Mr. Meyer himself
10    IV|        up and be beforehand with Aunt Teresa in case she put her
11    IV| grievance, telling him all about Aunt Teresa and the shabby trick
12    IV| exclaiming at the pretensions of Aunt Teresa. The youngest girl
13    IV|        with us than to live with Aunt Teresa!"~ ~"Oh, what a pleasant
14    IV|        she did not want to go to Aunt Teresa, they would all take
15    IV|       with me."~ ~"Where?"~ ~"To Aunt Teresa's."~ ~Every one present
16    IV|            I don't want to go to Aunt Teresa," she faltered timidly.~ ~
17    IV|            I don't want to go to Aunt Teresa!"~ ~"What? You don'
18    IV|    dragged her along with him to Aunt Teresa's. The child wept
19     V|          Fanny went to live with Aunt Teresa. Those three years
20     V|      would frequently say to her aunt that one day she would richly
21     V|          also wished to tell her aunt of the unselfish kindness
22     V|         home. There she took her aunt into her confidence, and
23    VI|         so untraceably, with her aunt?~ ~It was with a feeling
24    VI|       story of how Fanny and her aunt had unexpectedly disappeared
25    VI|      rushing despairingly to her aunt, knelt down before her and
26  VIII|        away there along with her aunt. Within a week, however,
27  VIII|     better. But first go and see Aunt Teresa, and in the mean
28    IX|          be as familiar with her aunt and guardian as she used
29    IX|      lain alone in her room. Her aunt had always slept in the
30    IX|          to write a few lines to Aunt Teresa, which you can take
31    IX|         these words -~ ~"My dear Aunt,~ ~"I know everything. Don'
32     X|       home, I must say."~ ~"Yes, aunt; I am going to stay here
33 XVIII|        remarkably well. But your aunt is sick, very sick, and
34   XIX|       and Teresa.~ ~The good old aunt, with clasped hands, was
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