Book, Chapter
1 I, I | part, but the custom of a man who cared little for dress,
2 I, II | is an extremely dangerous man, sire,” replied the chief
3 I, II | Very intelligent, but a man whose spirit it was impossible
4 I, II | According to his idea, a man who had once passed the
5 I, II | more serious is, that this man is not known to him. Ogareff’
6 I, II | current. It would take this man some time to traverse the
7 I, III | Have you found a fitting man?”~“I will answer for him
8 I, III | broad-shouldered, deep-chested man. His powerful head possessed
9 I, III | difficult task to move such a man against his will, for when
10 I, III | had the temperament of the man of action, who does not
11 I, III | his face, in the whole man, and which the Czar perceived
12 I, III | Michael Strogoff was the man.~A circumstance especially
13 I, III | Strogoff will do all that a man can do.”~“He is indeed a
14 I, III | can do.”~“He is indeed a man,” said the Czar.~
15 I, IV | Michael Strogoff was a man who feared neither frost
16 I, IV | one who seemed a military man, and the Czar’s courier
17 I, IV | circumstances in which a man would be likely to give
18 I, IV | latter looked at the young man for an instant, and mute
19 I, V | was very vexatious to a man so pressed for time. However,
20 I, V | demanded a tall and powerful man, who had approached unperceived.~“
21 I, V | I can see you,” said the man.~Michael Strogoff, remembering
22 I, V | stepped back ten paces.~The man seemed, as Michael observed
23 I, V | are going!”~Thereupon the man and woman entered the cottage,
24 I, V | start. But he was not a man to lie in bed after the
25 I, VI | we wish to go,’ that old man said. But ‘the Father’ is
26 I, VI | an energetic and vigorous man, would have personally to
27 I, VI | off suspicion from me. A man traveling alone across the
28 I, VI | gain him a passage. The man, after taking him into the
29 I, VI | rose and, like a drowning man who clutches at a spar,
30 I, VI | himself, he followed the man.~The young Livonian, seeing
31 I, VII | sister,” answered the young man. “We are going the same
32 I, VII | it was heard or not.~The man with the hearty voice spoke
33 I, VII | recognize the voices of the man and woman whom he had heard
34 I, VII | He tried to see if the man and woman who had just spoken
35 I, VIII| herself followed the old man and his troop, who had already
36 I, VIII| have recognized me as the man whom she saw at Nijni-Novgorod?
37 I, VIII| easy.”~By this time the man and Sangarre had disappeared.~
38 I, IX | changed at every relay. The man who drove the tarantass
39 I, IX | publication of the order, a young man and his sister, evidently
40 I, X | greatest difficulty that either man or beasts could stand against
41 I, X | of the cyclone, neither man nor beast could resist its
42 I, XI | Harry Blount, who was not a man to be behind in danger,
43 I, XII | door was flung open and a man appeared.~It was the traveler
44 I, XII | berlin, a military-looking man, apparently about forty
45 I, XII | demanded, with the air of a man accustomed to command.~“
46 I, XII | horses this moment,” said the man, and left the room.~The
47 I, XII | could this strong young man allow himself to be struck
48 I, XII | have believed that of a man who is so skillful in finishing
49 I, XII | bears. Is it the case that a man can be courageous at one
50 I, XII | humiliation from such a man. Going up to him as he had
51 I, XIII| wish to know who was the man who had struck him, whence
52 I, XIII| contemptuously at the young man, waited to be questioned.~“
53 I, XIII| Yes.”~“Do you know that man who took my horses?”~“No.”~“
54 I, XIII| do you think he was?”~“A man who knows how to make himself
55 I, XIII| Blows?”~“Blows, young man. I am of an age and strength
56 I, XIV | traitor to his country, but a man of much note, and of an
57 I, XIV | equal to any emergency. This man was Colonel Ivan Ogareff.~
58 I, XIV | possessed, he was not a man to succumb under such a
59 I, XIV | deceived me! This young man is not my child. He had
60 I, XIV | Who, then, was that young man whom thou didst call thy
61 I, XIV | Strogoff. “This is the tenth man in whom I have thought I
62 I, XIV | everywhere.”~“So this young man was not Michael Strogoff?”~“
63 I, XV | Strogoff, moreover, was a man certain of his road and
64 I, XV | is a dreary region, which man dearly disputes with tipulae,
65 I, XV | have much more to fear from man? It was probable. However,
66 I, XVI | of the building, an old man surrounded by weeping children.
67 I, XVI | Michael approached the old man.~“Will you answer me a few
68 I, XVI | Speak,” replied the old man.~“Have the Tartars passed
69 II, I | Daily Telegraph was not a man to indulge himself.~“M.
70 II, II | entered.~Feofar-Khan was a man of forty, tall, rather pale,
71 II, II | her thoughts.~Could such a man have died thus? For whom
72 II, II | His miracles if this good man, whom a noble object was
73 II, II | Nicholas. I know only one man, one alone, in whom such
74 II, III | of some bold or desperate man, and the strictest measures
75 II, III | violent emotion which a man can feel. His mother and
76 II, III | group of prisoners, saw this man pass. He had a presentiment
77 II, III | do not know it.”~“And the man in whom you thought you
78 II, III | Then advancing, “Ah, the man of Ichim?”~“Himself!” said
79 II, III | pain, stopped them. “This man is reserved for the Emir’
80 II, III | but Strogoff is a dead man. I suspect that, for his
81 II, IV | Ivan Ogareff was not a man to forgive having been struck
82 II, IV | a buffet from the young man’s fist.~Ogareff approached
83 II, V | Look while you may!”~The man who repeated the Emir’s
84 II, V | reserved for the unfortunate man, they returned to the town.
85 II, V | loss of life. The unhappy man was condemned to be blinded.~
86 II, V | Michael’s arms. The blind man knew not who had freed him,
87 II, VI | energy. “I will be the blind man’s dog,” said she.~On Ogareff’
88 II, VI | The eyelids of the blind man, made red by the heated
89 II, VI | It is a cart. A young man is leading it.”~“Is he alone?”~“
90 II, VI | strength and courage.~A young man was leading it, with a dog
91 II, VI | saw at once that the young man was Russian; his face was
92 II, VI | to him to recognize the man for his brow at once cleared.~“
93 II, VI | going?” repeated the young man, addressing himself more
94 II, VI | Blind!” repeated the young man, much moved.~“The Tartars
95 II, VI | The compassionate young man was greatly moved, and if
96 II, VI | they have with them a bad man, who will not let them loiter
97 II, VIII| Michael quickly, like a blind man whom the least sound arouses.~“
98 II, VIII| tied him. He was still “the Man of Iron,” of whom General
99 II, VIII| walked straight up to the man, and, before the latter
100 II, IX | Michael was still the same man who had sworn, whatever
101 II, IX | the body of the unhappy man. He listened if his heart
102 II, X | days’ journey for a strong man, even on foot.~Could Michael
103 II, X | Michael Strogoff still be that man?~Heaven, no doubt, did not
104 II, X | running to them, led the blind man and the girl to a little
105 II, X | command of the raft. He was a man of sixty-five, browned by
106 II, X | This last, who was an aged man, carried at his waist a
107 II, X | pays here,” replied the old man gravely; “every one risks
108 II, X | Nadia, the sister of the man who was no longer Nicholas
109 II, X | low voice, and the blind man, adding what they told him
110 II, X | Moscow: “Indeed, this is a Man!”~The raft swiftly threaded
111 II, XI | escape unscathed.~For a man who hoped soon to accomplish
112 II, XI | suspicious objects.~The old man looked attentively. “They
113 II, XI | will!” answered the old man. “Against His will there
114 II, XII | profession of a medical man in Irkutsk. He was clever
115 II, XII | Voranzoff, “Wassili Fedor is a man of worth and courage. His
116 II, XII | of police, “is that of a man obedient to the special
117 II, XII | into his presence. He was a man over forty, tall, of a stern
118 II, XII | to be killed to the last man?”~“They are not ignorant
119 II, XIII| courier!” he exclaimed.~A man entered. He appeared exhausted
120 II, XIII| recently-healed scar. The man had evidently had a long
121 II, XIII| taken the designation of the man whom he believed that he
122 II, XIII| they must fight to the last man, and blow up the town rather
123 II, XIII| obedient to his nature, a man who was never touched by
124 II, XIV | suddenly face to face with the man whom she had met at Ichim,
125 II, XIV | advantage over the blind man leaped upon him. But with
126 II, XIV | with one hand, the blind man grasped the arm of his enemy,
127 II, XIV | time to the charge. A blind man! Ogareff had only to deal
128 II, XIV | only to deal with a blind man! He was more than a match
129 II, XIV | from the ear of the blind man. His object was to strike
130 II, XIV | immobility of the blind man froze him. He had settled
131 II, XIV | imperceptible movement of the blind man’s knife turned aside the
132 II, XIV | wide-open eyes of the blind man. Those eyes which seemed
133 II, XIV | became animated, the blind man walked straight up to Ivan
134 II, XIV | ground, he recognized the man whom he believed to be the
135 II, XIV | voice, “Who killed that man?” he asked.~“I,” replied
136 II, XIV | me rather the name of the man who lies at your feet!”~“
137 II, XIV | lies at your feet!”~“That man, I know him! He is a servant
138 II, XIV | the Czar’s courier!”~“That man, your Highness, is not a
139 II, XV | the death of Ogareff. This man was the mainspring of the
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