Book, Chapter
1 I, I | the last telegram we were able to send beyond Lake Baikal.”~“
2 I, II | can be done.~“Shall I be able to find this head and heart?”
3 I, IV | traitor had not yet been able to quit European Russia.
4 I, VI | yesterday evening she has been able to get a carriage and leave
5 I, VI | movement would have been able, in a disguise, to pass
6 I, VI | great risk of not being able to leave the town in the
7 I, VI | of his elbows Michael was able to cross the court. But
8 I, VII | said the first, “I was able this morning to telegraph
9 I, IX | the tarantass, Nadia was able to sleep for some hours.
10 I, X | dense clouds, not being able to perform their functions.
11 I, X | in the dark, we shall be able, if not with ease, at least
12 I, XI | whose face he had not been able to see, and of the strange
13 I, XII | belong to whichever of us is able to start. Defend yourself;
14 I, XIII| that he might have been able to tell her?~Michael remained
15 I, XIII| The postmaster not being able to supply them with fresh
16 I, XIII| Perhaps your mother has been able to leave Omsk?”~“It is possible,
17 I, XIII| still at Omsk, you will be able to spare an hour to go to
18 I, XIV | little father, thou wilt be able to proceed. Thou didst fall
19 I, XIV | repelled, had not yet been able to reduce. Upon its embattled
20 I, XIV | that Ivan Ogareff had been able to leave the town of Nijni-Novgorod,
21 I, XV | Michael Strogoff was even able to obtain some refreshment
22 I, XV | when or how he might be able to replace it. Desiring,
23 I, XV | hunters have never been able to inure themselves.~Michael
24 I, XVI | was not given, and he was able to gain the angle made by
25 I, XVI | hour only was the latter able to keep out of range of
26 II, I | last dispatches have been able to pass the Russian frontier?”~“
27 II, II | Ogareff, not having been able to reduce the high town,
28 II, II | the soldiers had not been able to keep back appeared before
29 II, II | for it was she—was thus able, without knowing it, to
30 II, II | was, she might have been able to carry to a successful
31 II, II | her companion, Marfa was able to follow the soldiers who
32 II, III | They had not till then been able to get through those who
33 II, III | guard, and I shall not be able to get at him. I must have
34 II, IV | mother and son had not been able to speak together since
35 II, VI | prisoners were that night able to escape from the Tartars,
36 II, VI | other prisoners, had been able to escape and return to
37 II, VI | believe me, she will never be able to get to Irkutsk!”~“Friend,”
38 II, VII | longed to see, to be better able to avoid this peril, but
39 II, VIII| probably they would not be able to exchange him for another;
40 II, VIII| the steppe had they been able to join the highroad to
41 II, VIII| that Michael, having been able to throw himself out of
42 II, IX | hundred-fold the help which I was able to give you at first? I
43 II, X | at Irkutsk, but not being able to get there by land, the
44 II, X | Krasnoiarsk, who had not been able to get to Irkutsk before
45 II, X | marrying, burying. He had been able to protect his wife and
46 II, X | been Michael, before being able even to reach the Dinka,
47 II, X | chance that they might be able to pass under cover of the
48 II, X | what he already knew, was able to form an exact idea of
49 II, XI | ice-fields—had they been able to get through to where
50 II, XII | firm hope that we shall be able to hold out until the arrival
51 II, XII | troops. We shall then be able to drive off these barbarian
52 II, XIII| the case, I wished to be able to bring the contents of
53 II, XV | destroyed, Michael had been able to read, and had read the
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