Chapter
1 I | extricating himself from difficulty; he was never perplexed,
2 III | Well, the risks, the difficulty of the thing.”~“As for difficulties,”
3 IV | toward Ghat, guided, with difficulty, by the Touaregs. After
4 VIII | a marksman would find no difficulty in lodging a bullet in the
5 IX | descending. That is the real difficulty, doctor.”~“And why, my dear
6 IX | one another. It would be a difficulty and an obstacle only for
7 IX | question. There is the only difficulty that science need now seek
8 XI | advance only with extreme difficulty, and did not expect to be
9 XIII | good Victoria will find no difficulty in passing over them.”~In
10 XIII | sound is conveyed with difficulty, and the voice is not so
11 XIV | the doctor would find no difficulty in coming down again with
12 XIV | and he got into it without difficulty. A few minutes later, the
13 XIV | pointed out to him, without difficulty, near to a deserted village;
14 XV | this, we shall find some difficulty in establishing commercial
15 XVIII | doctor experienced some difficulty in guiding his course; he
16 XXI | dear friends. The greatest difficulty would be for this poor fellow
17 XXXIII | swimmer. He would find no difficulty in swimming across the Firth
18 XXXIII | but they encountered great difficulty. They had to tear the strong
19 XXXIII | morning, but not without great difficulty —which to Joe would have
20 XXXIII | resistance.~The doctor had much difficulty in restraining the balloon;
21 XXXIV | surrounded with unusual difficulty. The anchor, which had caught
22 XXXVIII| advancing on foot and with difficulty over a waste of sand half
23 XLIII | they galloped along without difficulty over the low levels and
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