Part,  Chapter

 1    III,      II|       hand.~ ~"Art thou going to strike me?" inquired the child,
 2    III,      IV| condition. No one was allowed to strike or abuse him in any way.~ ~
 3     IV,      IV|        night and heard the clock strike, I would beg of it not to
 4      V,      II|        he is become? He can even strike fire and light a pipe!"~ ~
 5      V,      II|        the two enraged men would strike the first blow.~ ~The threatening
 6    VII,       I|        admit that a clock cannot strike until the hands have made
 7    VII,      II|      great pity were a bullet to strike the spot on the noble brow
 8    VII,     III|         enough to a Frenchman to strike him, the result would certainly
 9     IX,      II|         second time he seemed to strike fire with something; at
10     IX,      II|         monster. I taught him to strike fire; and he was evidently
11     IX,      II|         teaching that monster to strike fire. It has made us lose
12     IX,     III|          tigers upon the foe.~ ~"Strike for their heads!" commanded
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