Book, Chapter
1 I, I | not forget it, and after ten or even twenty years he
2 I, II | more than one hundred and ten degrees from west to east,
3 I, II | good infantry could repel ten times the number of Kirghiz;
4 I, III | old Peter Strogoff, dead ten years since— inhabited the
5 I, III | four-and-twenty hours without eating, ten nights without sleeping,
6 I, IV | train would accomplish it in ten hours. Once arrived at Nijni-Novgorod,
7 I, V | and calmly stepped back ten paces.~The man seemed, as
8 I, VII | against the current more than ten miles an hour. Including
9 I, VII | at seventeen minutes past ten.”~“And I sent it to the
10 I, VII | at thirteen minutes past ten.”~“Bravo, Mr. Blount!”~“
11 I, VIII| without uttering a word.~About ten o’clock in the morning,
12 I, XII | whose population is usually ten thousand inhabitants, then
13 I, XII | their carriage put away. In ten minutes Michael was told
14 I, XIV | him everywhere.”~Less than ten minutes afterwards a Tartar
15 I, XV | he should arrive within ten days if he wished to get
16 I, XV | Tartar scouts were signaled ten versts behind upon the road
17 I, XVI | or simple commander of ten men. These two officers
18 I, XVII| the public, when they pay. Ten copecks a word, whenever
19 I, XVII| stamped with impatience.~“Ten copecks a word,” said the
20 I, XVII| we have been these twice ten tedious years, yet we no
21 I, XVII| sir, it is his right—at ten copecks a word.”~And he
22 II, III | the 16th of August, about ten in the morning, trumpet-calls
23 II, VII | put his horse in motion.~Ten minutes after they entered
24 II, VIII| him frequent rests— every ten miles, for instance—forty
25 II, VIII| in eight days, or at most ten, he would be in the presence
26 II, IX | continue the march.~It was ten o’clock. The sun had more
27 II, IX | the 18th of September, at ten in the evening, Kimilteiskoe
28 II, XI | the temperature being now ten degrees below freezing point.
29 II, XI | of the outposts. At about ten o’clock, however, Harry
30 II, XI | that moment, a group of ten huge wolves, raging with
31 II, XI | but still on they went.~In ten minutes, the other side
32 II, XII | being attacked on that side. Ten o’clock had just struck.
33 II, XIV | was only a feint.~About ten in the evening, the state
34 II, XIV | he to Nadia.~In less than ten minutes, they arrived at
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