Book, Chapter
1 I, V | annoyance, he found that no boat started for Perm till the
2 I, VII | are you on board this boat, too, my dear fellow; you
3 I, VII | going thus to the end of the boat, he had no other idea but
4 I, VIII| up again, by chartering a boat at my cousin’s expense,
5 I, XIII| were partly flooded and the boat could not get in near enough.
6 I, XIII| eddy easily crossed by the boat. The two boatmen propelled
7 I, XIII| seated in the stern of the boat, and always in dread of
8 I, XIII| by the new direction the boat was rapidly taking. It had
9 I, XIII| circumstances, have done more.~The boat was in the middle of the
10 I, XIII| soldiers from the first boat.~Michael recognized the
11 I, XIV | carried her off in their boat, and have continued the
12 I, XVI | Would there be a ferry boat there, or should he, finding
13 I, XVI | the Obi, when, either by boat or by swimming, he must
14 I, XVI | The Obi was deserted—not a boat of any description which
15 II, VII | wide course.~“Do you see a boat?” asked Michael, casting
16 II, VII | lovely sight!”~“Do you see a boat?” asked Michael.~“I see
17 II, VII | fifty versts.~But not a boat was to be seen. All had
18 II, VII | the river, and see if some boat has not been forgotten on
19 II, VII | direction indicated. If only a boat or a barge large enough
20 II, VII | of Krasnoiarsk.~But not a boat was on the shore, not a
21 II, VII | Strogoff. On the Irtych, the boat which carried him and Nadia
22 II, X | of the town.~No kind of boat was to be found; they had
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