Chapter

 1     I|           his brow the while, and perceived a carriage a good distance
 2     I|      passing through the door, he perceived the empty coach-house, in
 3   III|              The councillors also perceived that the Whitsun King had
 4   III|       Martin's horse, whenever he perceived any other horse half a head
 5   III|  gold-bedizened costume till they perceived that there was only a gipsy
 6   VII|          poor supplikans, when he perceived that he had carried a cattle-book
 7   VII|       table. When he got there he perceived that another cover was standing
 8  XIII|          of Italian poplars, they perceived a solitary horseman trotting
 9  XIII|           his pursuers, when they perceived him on the hillock: the
10  XIII| accelerating his pace whenever he perceived that the distance between
11  XIII|           it. At that moment they perceived a horseman coming towards
12  XIII|       with an unclouded mind, she perceived two persons sitting by her
13    XV|       Kecskerey to himself, as he perceived the intruder in the doorway;
14   XVI|        time she looked at him she perceived, much to her indignation,
15  XVII|     courtyard. The young nobleman perceived and hastened towards them.
16  XVII|         burned like fire when she perceived Rudolf. She immediately
17  XVII|          accord in two places, he perceived two pressed flowers between
18  XVII|           attention, that he only perceived that the lady had returned
19    XX|        wooden bridge, the visitor perceived what he sought.~ ~"Those
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