Chapter

 1     V|    treasure that is! and what a pity more attention is not paid
 2     V|     emotion, for she really did pity her sister who rode in a
 3   VII|        the Theiss."~ ~"It was a pity, truly, that the water carried
 4    IX|       All right, though it is a pity to ink your fingers, I think,
 5     X| tremulous voice. She really did pity the woman.~ ~"Oh yes, yes!
 6  XIII|       the matter. It is a great pity that nobody knows how to
 7    XV|    Philistine."~ ~"Ah, that's a pity for you, for you cannot
 8  XVII|      you not your love but your pity; I shall know how to get
 9 XVIII|         The bystanders began to pity him, and the softer-hearted
10 XVIII|          Kecskerey alone had no pity for him. He never pitied
11   XIX|      the doctor, with a look of pity.~ ~And the good old Nabob
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