Chapter

1     I|      his pipe out of his mouth merely for the sake of what he
2   III|      Tisza-Füred, in which not merely a wild bull but a hippopotamus
3   III|        King had need to be not merely a good runner, but a good
4  VIII|     neither have I come hither merely to gossip, but to carry
5    XI|      from your seat instead of merely bowing - Louis will lose
6   XVI|   heard him there. Now she not merely loved, she adored him.[Pg
7   XVI|        not betray herself; she merely said, "I don't fancy we
8  XVII| ladyship knew the flowers, not merely by name, but through the
9   XXI|        patriot, a nobleman not merely by name, but in heart and
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