Book, Chapter
1 I, I | splendor.~During the whole evening the bands of the Preobra-jensky
2 I, I | meet and converse.~This evening they were both on the look
3 I, IV | at half-past eight in the evening arrived at the station of
4 I, V | wandering, as he had done the evening before, through the streets?
5 I, V | reached the square where the evening before he had fallen in
6 I, V | their officers. Since the evening before, aides-decamp, leaving
7 I, VI | entirely evacuated before the evening, and to the tumult of the
8 I, VI | the words exchanged last evening between those two gipsies
9 I, VI | probable that since yesterday evening she has been able to get
10 I, VII | like to awaken her. It was evening before she reappeared on
11 I, VII | heat of the day. As the evening advanced, the greater number
12 I, IX | by God.”~On arriving that evening Michael instinctively asked
13 I, XII | having occurred. The same evening, the 22d of July, they arrived
14 I, XII | before eight o’clock the next evening the distance could and should
15 I, XII | was eight o’clock in the evening when the two carriages reached
16 I, XIII| remained silent all the evening. The postmaster not being
17 I, XIII| muttered as he ended his evening prayer.~He especially felt
18 I, XIII| At four o’clock in the evening they reached Abatskaia,
19 I, XV | at eight o’clock in the evening, that Michael Strogoff had
20 I, XV | provinces.~So, during the evening and night of the 2nd of
21 I, XV | conveyance on wheels.~In the evening, at nine o’clock, Michael
22 II, III | where both had arrived the evening before, and returned to
23 II, IV | curiosity; but the same evening they both intended to take
24 II, VII | road. It was seven in the evening; the outline of the churches
25 II, VII | clearly defined against the evening sky, and the waters of the
26 II, IX | September, at ten in the evening, Kimilteiskoe was at last
27 II, IX | October, at six o’clock in the evening, a wide sheet of water lay
28 II, X | set at five o’clock in the evening, and during the long nights
29 II, X | course.~At eight in the evening the moorings were cast off,
30 II, X | three or four o’clock in the evening. This did not trouble them;
31 II, X | Siberian sea.~At four in the evening, the mouth of the Angara
32 II, X | had left Tomsk the same evening, with the fixed determination
33 II, X | river. It was five in the evening and getting dusk. The night
34 II, XI | TWO BANKS~BY eight in the evening, the country, as the state
35 II, XII | hesitated no longer.~One evening, the 2d of October, a council
36 II, XIII| sortie, which was made this evening to repulse a Tartar detachment.
37 II, XIII| for his taste. The very evening the pretended courier arrived,
38 II, XIII| deliver up.~Twice in the evening he came upon the glacis
39 II, XIII| arrangements were made, and on this evening a note fell from the top
40 II, XIV | Siberian winter, and this evening it was especially severe.
41 II, XIV | feint.~About ten in the evening, the state of the river
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