Book, Chapter
1 I, I | sympathetic. However, they did not avoid each other, but endeavored
2 I, I | it would be difficult to avoid knowing it, since my last
3 I, VI | beforehand, and enable her to avoid such a repulse.~But all
4 I, VIII| was endeavoring rather to avoid attention than to attract
5 I, IX | driver never even tries to avoid either stones, ruts, bogs,
6 I, X | crouch upon the ground to avoid being blown down. The carriage,
7 I, X | must certainly be done, to avoid still longer detentions.
8 I, XII | wished, on the contrary, to avoid the country devastated by
9 I, XII | I particularly wish to avoid any difficulty.”~“Then,
10 I, XII | would have been better to avoid.~“Enough!” said the traveler.
11 I, XIV | Omsk, and he took care to avoid those streets which were
12 I, XIV | ever—Michael Strogoff must avoid Ivan Ogareff, and contrive
13 I, XV | Michael Strogoff could not avoid. He had been well advised
14 I, XVI | take the Irkutsk road and avoid Tomsk.~This new route decided
15 I, XVI | them; if Tartars I must avoid them. But how? Where can
16 I, XVI | where it joined the road.~To avoid being seen, Michael’s intention
17 I, XVII| should do next. He wished to avoid Tomsk, now occupied by the
18 II, IV | she must above everything avoid drawing attention upon herself,
19 II, VII | see, to be better able to avoid this peril, but that was
20 II, VIII| they must at every cost avoid the place.~“Advance cautiously,”
21 II, XI | one that they could not avoid. Chance discovered it to
22 II, XI | to make detours; now, to avoid running foul of a block,
|