Book, Chapter
1 I, III | have had no idea whither to turn. All his father’s secrets
2 I, IV | suspicious.~The young girl in her turn, exhibited, not a passport,
3 I, VII | No harm at all. So, in my turn, I will ask your permission
4 I, IX | at home. The family would turn out themselves rather than
5 I, XI | about to introduce in his turn his companion, Alcide Jolivet,
6 I, XI | you have done us a good turn, and if you are going farther
7 I, XIV | mother renounced him in her turn, it could occur only from
8 I, XV | halt for a moment at some turn in the road it was to breathe
9 I, XVI | intention of examining every turn.~Michael feared this, and
10 I, XVII| ended the dispatch.~“My turn now,” cried Alcide Jolivet,
11 II, II | saw at once how he might turn this woman to account. Whatever
12 II, II | his phrases the emphatic turn which distinguishes the
13 II, III | they came to drink in their turn.~The old woman bent over
14 II, III | among the last. When in his turn he passed before his mother,
15 II, III | traveling companion a good turn. Korpanoff or Strogoff is
16 II, IV | her hair— passed in her turn before the Emir without
17 II, IX | father’s hands, I in my turn will thank you for having
18 II, IX | must cross the steppe and turn to Irkutsk. He had not now
19 II, XI | which arose at an abrupt turn of the river.~By this time
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