Book, Chapter
1 I, II | in summer in a kibick or telga; in winter, in a sledge.~
2 I, IX | harness his horses? To a telga or to a tarantass? The telga
3 I, IX | telga or to a tarantass? The telga is nothing but an open four-wheeled
4 I, IX | perck-ladnoi,” is carried by the telga, as any road is good enough
5 I, IX | been obliged to employ a telga, if he had not been lucky
6 I, IX | in it as well as in the telga; in the absence of iron,
7 I, IX | as easy to repair as the telga, and is, moreover, less
8 I, IX | Is it a berlin?”~“No, a telga.”~“How many travelers?”~“
9 I, IX | rocks, he merely said:~“Is a telga still before us?”~“Yes.”~“
10 I, X | could those travelers in the telga ahead have for being so
11 I, XI | the cries came from the telga, which had so long preceded
12 I, XI | this is what you call a telga!”~“Oh, that abominable driver!
13 I, XI | are in the worse half of a telga; no driver, no horses. Is
14 I, XI | it to the remains of the telga, and to-mor-how, if no accident
15 I, XI | leaving the better half of his telga behind?”~“Not a bit, and
16 I, XI | carriage, and—”~“But the telga,” observed the Englishman.~“
17 I, XI | tarantass had reached the telga, which was still conscientiously
18 I, XI | cords to the remains of the telga, the reporters took their
19 I, XI | tarantass preceding the telga, arrived at Ekaterenburg,
20 I, XI | against the owner of the telga.~“A lawsuit in Russia, my
21 I, XI | and Russian dictionary: “Telga, a Russian carriage with
22 I, XII| in replacing, by a sound telga, the famous demi-carriage
23 I, XII| neither a tarantass nor a telga, but a post-berlin, which
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