Chapter
1 1 | ex-burgomaster of Dort, his native town, and member of the Assembly
2 1 | of the apartments of the town prison, the preparatory
3 1 | this chapter, the whole town was crowding towards the
4 1 | Buytenhof to the gate of the town, a nice little opportunity
5 1 | to carry him out of the town." ~Whereupon the jailer,
6 2 | be enabled to leave the town." ~"Very possibly, as the
7 3 | accompany you out of the town?" ~"We have not?" ~"Well,
8 3 | you intend to leave the town." ~"But my brother is not
9 4 | perhaps, but not from the town; you will see, Van Deken,
10 4 | been given to close the town gates, Monseigneur?" ~"No, --
11 4 | no one should leave the town." ~"My good man," said the
12 4 | and then went about the town selling small slices of
13 5 | until he was clear of the town and the neighbouring villages. ~
14 5 | his entrance into their town, the cup of honour was offered
15 5 | presence of Cornelius in the town. ~In the same degree as
16 6 | came to pay to his native town. ~ ~
17 7 | riot the shopkeepers of the town and the sailors of the port
18 24| quarters at a good hotel in the town, and there he waited. ~ ~
19 26| like wildfire through the town. ~Rosa had not a little
20 29| been taken to their own town to be made an example of,
21 30| for Rosa to appear at the Town Hall. ~There, in the large
22 31| bloom, -- Haarlem, this tiny town, full of trees and of sunshine,
23 31| the bulb of a tulip. The town, which did not wish to be
24 31| learned societies of the town, the magistrates, the military,
25 31| which the gentlemen of the town councils generously treated
26 31| hands, and made the old town of Haarlem re-echo with
27 33| dowry; it is the gift of the town of Haarlem to the tulip." ~
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