Chapter

 1     I|    mud and remain there till dawn, then stick fast it must,
 2     I| dance with them and him till dawn. Then he sets the whole
 3   III|     Hungary.~ ~It is the red dawn of a Whitsun Day, and a
 4   III|      Whitsun Day, and a real dawn it is. Very early, soon
 5   III|  thrown.~ ~The bell of early dawn was only now beginning to
 6    IV|      his counting-house from dawn to dusk; Mrs. Meyer during
 7   VII|  Jock could scarce await the dawn of St. John Baptist's Day;
 8   VII|   day had only just begun to dawn, and the eastern curtain
 9   VII|    and about two hours after dawn."~ ~"Who else is here?"~ ~"
10    IX|      her soul. Only the late dawn brought rest at last to
11    IX|      pale, but as red as the dawn, serene, and open as a half-blown
12     X|     rule.~ ~The day does not dawn twice for the richest man,
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