Chapter

 1    II|       the young dandy. "I am not thinking of murder or poison. I am
 2    II|      murder or poison. I am only thinking that the poor old fellow'
 3    IV|          lie busy all night long thinking of some way out of the difficulty
 4    IV|         voice -~ ~"She is always thinking of you. All she wants is
 5     V|        knew at once that she was thinking of her relatives.~ ~"Why
 6    VI|       the idea that that man was thinking of her, perhaps. Ah, that
 7    VI|          there was no reason for thinking of him at all now; and yet
 8    IX|   golden-minded damsel!)~ ~"I am thinking especially of a sofa that
 9    IX|          alas! What was the girl thinking about? Perhaps she only
10   XII| countenance she[Pg 273] had been thinking of so often, and which looked
11  XIII|      Those who had gone to sleep thinking of hunting, and had dreamt
12  XIII|         one at Pest. I have been thinking to myself what an entirely
13  XIII|          did not mean that. I am thinking of serious things, of charitable
14  XVII|        as pearls," lisped Fanny, thinking it quite natural that they
15   XIX|         rejoiced within himself, thinking[Pg 336] it a sign of amendment;
16    XX|      much, and who, perhaps, was thinking of him there below. Her
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