Book, Chapter
1 I, II | population of two million five hundred thousand inhabitants,
2 I, II | some time to traverse the five thousand two hundred versts
3 I, IV | usually occupied from four to five weeks, even though every
4 I, V | had scarcely been there five minutes when a hand was
5 I, V | break of day.~He had still five hours to pass in Nijni-Novgorod;
6 I, VII | speaker, that is to say, five wide-open fingers, vigorously
7 I, X | summit not being more than five thousand feet. Eternal snow
8 I, XIII| calculated on reaching it some five or six versts below the
9 I, XIV | bank of the Irtych, only five versts from Omsk,” replied
10 I, XV | herds. The grass here was five or six feet in height, and
11 I, XVI | Michael, having presented five and twenty roubles to the
12 I, XVII| the affair of a moment.~Five seconds later the shell
13 II, IV | make them wait, and before five o’clock the trumpets announced
14 II, VII | expression, “an hotel for five days,” which, whether one
15 II, VII | reached the opposite side five versts below. They had drifted
16 II, IX | passed through at least five or six days before.~Beyond
17 II, X | October. The sun set at five o’clock in the evening,
18 II, X | entered the river. It was five in the evening and getting
19 II, XI | of smoke to a height of five or six hundred feet. On
20 II, XI | fugitives not reach Irkutsk by five o’clock in the morning,
21 II, XI | pressure and of the cold. Five hundred feet beyond, the
22 II, XII | the town to the number of five hundred.”~The political
23 II, XIV | set at forty minutes past five, having traced its diurnal
24 II, XIV | disappeared down the current, and five or six only now occupied
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