Part,  Chapter

 1      I,       I|        companion had fanned the fire into a fresh blaze.~ ~"It
 2      I,     III|         and threw them into the fire.~ ~Then, with the hand of
 3     II,       I|       flowers. They proposed to fire a grand salute from the
 4     IV,     III|     scare them away."~ ~"We can fire off our guns from here;
 5     IV,      IV|       third kept up a continual fire. The French horsemen could
 6     IV,      IV|    dropped under the continuous fire! The general certainly should
 7     IV,      IV|       whom it comes in contact! Fire! Boom! Heads off!"~ ~The
 8      V,      II|       He knew Marie's horror of fire - how she suffered with
 9      V,      II|   tinder, and steel, and struck fire in the proper manner; he
10      V,      II|      become? He can even strike fire and light a pipe!"~ ~By
11      V,      II|    teeth, he blew the smoke and fire from the bowl like a miniature
12      V,      II|       wild creature to kindle a fire, and thus aroused in him
13      V,      II|      and he will end by setting fire to houses and other buildings."~ ~"
14      V,      II|         thickest of the rain of fire, and tried to catch the
15      V,      II|       him from running into the fire. Suddenly a rocket shot
16      V,      II|      thought that the beautiful fire belonged to him because
17     VI,       I|        his eyes burned with the fire of terror as he moaned again
18     VI,      IV|       calling for the purifying fire of the battle-field. I myself
19    VII,       I|        not customary to put the fire underneath the tobacco in
20   VIII,     III|          Pray throw it into the fire yonder."~ ~Katharina obeyed
21     IX,      II|        wood was collected for a fire. There was no need to fear
22     IX,      II|        time he seemed to strike fire with something; at any rate,
23     IX,      II|          I taught him to strike fire; and he was evidently attracted
24     IX,      II|     another - the morass was on fire in a dozen places.~ ~"Hell,
25     IX,      II|      has set the marsh-grass on fire, and it was I who taught
26     IX,      II| teaching that monster to strike fire. It has made us lose four
27     IX,      II|    still another hindrance. The fire in the morass had alarmed
28     IX,     III|        thicket let me know. Set fire to that tallest clump of
29     IX,     III|         Volons, when a rattling fire in their own rear brought
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