Chapter
1 4 | have been served! Oh thou Sun! thou Sun! as truly as I
2 4 | served! Oh thou Sun! thou Sun! as truly as I am called
3 4 | William the Silent, thou Sun, thou hadst best look to
4 5 | situated in such a way that the sun, falling on it as into a
5 5 | which shutting out the sun, took half a degree of warmth
6 5 | he wanted somewhat more sun for his paintings, and he
7 5 | discovery that too much sun was injurious to tulips,
8 5 | powerful heat of the midday sun. He therefore felt almost
9 6 | discretion and patience of the sun's heat; the clear water,
10 6 | a garden exposed to the sun; cabinets with glass walls,
11 6 | black colour, exposed to the sun or to the lamp those which
12 7 | some occasional rays of the sun to enter, by opening one
13 9 | window. ~But when the rising sun began to gild the coping
14 11| to screen them from the sun. They will flower black,
15 12| of red wax. ~And the same sun, yellow and pale, as it
16 12| as it behooves a Dutch sun to be, was shining in the
17 16| selfishness. However, the sun sometimes visits me. I will,
18 16| chances of good air, of the sun, and abundance of moisture." ~"
19 17| morning I looked at it in the sun, and after having moved
20 19| those pale rays of the April sun which, being the first,
21 19| in the light of the April sun, Rosa or the tulip, the
22 20| At present it has the sun all day long, -- that is
23 20| that is to say when the sun shines. But when it once
24 21| morning, a beam of the morning sun was playing about those
25 22| to what wonder under the sun I shall compare you." ~"
26 22| than ever man was under the sun.' I only lack one thing,
27 23| killed by frost. ~When the sun became too hot, Rosa likewise
28 24| did the first rays of the sun enter through the iron grating
29 28| wings would melt in the sun; I should surely kill myself,
30 31| breezy and exposed to the sun's hot rays, she seemed to
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