Chapter
1 5 | 5. The Tulip-Fancier And His Neighbour~
2 5 | expensive, -- he became a tulip-fancier. ~It was the time when the
3 6 | 6. The Hatred Of A Tulip-Fancier~ From that moment Boxtel'
4 6 | in the eyes of a genuine tulip-fancier; as to killing a man, it
5 7 | sanctum sanctorum of the tulip-fancier, was, as Delphi of old,
6 7 | not as a man, but as a tulip-fancier, his only thought was for
7 11| innocent appearance of a tulip-fancier, participated in the detestable
8 12| one martyrdom, on the poor tulip-fancier. ~Yet, notwithstanding all
9 14| Prince of Orange sent the tulip-fancier Van Baerle there. ~The cell
10 14| ever fell to the lot of any tulip-fancier was reserved for him. ~One
11 16| importance which the unfortunate tulip-fancier attached to it, than that
12 16| about other things, and the tulip-fancier found out to his great astonishment
13 17| through the brain of the tulip-fancier. The blood rushed to his
14 17| grief of the unfortunate tulip-fancier, and who, with the pure
15 21| as thoroughly happy as a tulip-fancier would be to whom one has
16 22| but it is impossible. A tulip-fancier like him will not tarry
17 23| Baerle. ~What no one but a tulip-fancier, and an envious tulip-fancier,
18 23| tulip-fancier, and an envious tulip-fancier, could have discovered, --
19 24| enemy, -- "Ah, you innocent tulip-fancier, you gentle scholar; you
20 29| Prince. ~The unfortunate tulip-fancier then felt that he had no
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