Chapter

 1     I|             himself for terror, and wished to comfort and compensate
 2   III|          popped their heads out and wished Mr. Andrew Varju a very
 3   III|         prolonged roar. Martin, who wished to entice the beast on to
 4    IV|           of his rags, he said, and wished his daughters to be equally
 5    IV|               The chastised damsels wished, in their wrath, that their
 6     V|            counsel of her. She also wished to tell her aunt of the
 7     V|             a woman, but a man, who wished to remain for ever in the
 8     V|           Who could this man be who wished to make her happy without
 9    VI|          table.~ ~The two gentlemen wished him bon jour. He responded
10   VII|        guests to silence. Every one wished his neighbour a good appetite,
11    IX|            mortal disaster which he wished to prevent.~ ~When they
12    IX|             their coffee. Fanny had wished her mother good morning
13    IX|                The old man entered, wished them good morning, and inquired
14    IX|          Those who did not know and wished to know each other were
15     X|             to ask him? He devoutly wished that some other person was
16     X|            again and forget what he wished to say.~ ~Then he took up
17     X| confidential voice -~ ~"I have long wished to meet you, and have been
18  XIII|     thronged him to make way, as he wished to pay his respects immediately
19  XIII|             her forehead, as if she wished to drive from thence the
20   XVI|             town-hall.~ ~Szentirmay wished his installation to be conducted
21  XVII|      situated as Kárpátfalva. Fanny wished, in fact, to be far away
22   XXI|            the trust.~ ~"'She' also wished it," said the Nabob. "In
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