Book, Chapter
1 I, I | more regularity than the feet of the dancers on the floor
2 I, III | against his will, for when his feet were once planted on the
3 I, IV | journey, covered her small feet.~Michael Strogoff fancied
4 I, IX | wheels, with eight or nine feet between them, assure a certain
5 I, IX | my limbs stiffening, my feet freezing in triple woolen
6 I, X | more than five thousand feet. Eternal snow is there unknown,
7 I, X | on the left, two hundred feet in front of the tarantass.~
8 I, X | they refused to move.~A few feet farther on, and the mass
9 I, X | behind it, and planting his feet on the ground, by main force
10 I, X | electric fluid, scarcely twenty feet from the tarantass, flared
11 I, X | counter-shock, but, regaining his feet, found himself happily unhurt.~
12 I, XIII| to a thickness of several feet, they are easily practicable,
13 I, XIII| Michael, springing to his feet, bent his gaze up the river.~
14 I, XIII| were now only a hundred feet distant. They carried a
15 I, XV | grass here was five or six feet in height, and had made
16 I, XV | extended over three hundred feet, and travelers by tarantass,
17 I, XV | whether the soil beneath his feet was solid or whether it
18 I, XVI | Plunging in about forty feet, he was stopped by a stream
19 I, XVI | sheep-skin cap, and on their feet yellow high-heeled boots
20 I, XVI | corner some two hundred feet from the wood. Unfortunately,
21 II, IV | from the head to the little feet, such was the profusion
22 II, IV | at her waist, and at her feet might have been valued at
23 II, VI | long a stage? How could her feet, bleeding under that forced
24 II, VII | They were about a hundred feet above the Yenisei, and could
25 II, VIII| were trampled by horse’s feet, and that trees were cut
26 II, VIII| pit, some thirty or forty feet deep, at the side of the
27 II, IX | suffered dreadfully. Her aching feet could scarcely support her;
28 II, IX | Nadia stopped, as if their feet had been fast to the ground.
29 II, IX | lay at Michael Strogoff’s feet. It was Lake Baikal.~
30 II, X | situated seventeen hundred feet above the level of the sea.
31 II, X | to a thickness of several feet, and is crossed by the sleighs
32 II, XI | from three to four hundred feet divided it from the flames
33 II, XI | height of five or six hundred feet. On the right bank, the
34 II, XI | of the cold. Five hundred feet beyond, the river widened
35 II, XIII| Grand Duke had rolled at the feet of Feofar-Khan.~Ivan Ogareff,
36 II, XIV | the low temperature. A few feet below them, the ice in large
37 II, XIV | the man who lies at your feet!”~“That man, I know him!
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