Chapter
1 2 | Count, "there you at once ask me more than I can tell
2 2 | crowd turning away; "go and ask for a meanness at the Town-hall,
3 2 | sentiment in his heart? You ask whether he is strong or
4 7 | called?' the fanciers will ask. -- 'Tulipa nigra Barlaensis!' -- '
5 11| righteous man, he said, -- ~"You ask me things, gentlemen, to
6 11| to the ground. "You may ask for any clergyman you please." ~
7 11| earth is short." ~"I come to ask a favour of you," said Rosa,
8 11| indeed, my dear, I should ask you to help me in carrying
9 11| Rosa, dear Rosa, and I ask nothing in return but your
10 11| manage it. Go to Dort and ask Butruysheim, my gardener,
11 15| his legs just as though to ask him what right he had still
12 15| glad to see me?" ~"Can you ask? But how did you contrive
13 15| He had not yet dared to ask Rosa what she had done with
14 15| going to the Stadtholder, to ask from him for my father the
15 17| him at the Hague, and to ask him to let him see the prison.
16 17| easy?" ~"I should certainly ask you to do so." ~"Well, then,
17 18| that he had?'" ~"Did he ask that?" inquired Cornelius,
18 20| unfortunate speech before. I ask it again: shall I always
19 20| it again: shall I always ask it in vain?" ~"On the following
20 20| said, laughing, "I will not ask for impossibilities." ~And,
21 26| What do you mean?" ~"I ask you what can be proved by
22 27| conclusion that she would not ask this question if there were
23 32| he ventured once more to ask the meaning of all this
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