Book, Chapter
1 I, III| word, whilst Michael stood perfectly motionless.~The Czar, apparently
2 I, IV | therefore noted in his book this perfectly correct observation, “My
3 I, VI | under the circumstances, perfectly justifiable.~“All Russian
4 I, IX | understood the iemschik’s slang perfectly; “eagles, do you hear, at
5 I, IX | kept to a steady long trot, perfectly regular, whether up or down
6 I, X | threatening, the air being perfectly still. It was just as if
7 I, X | every side.~The road was perfectly deserted. The tarantass
8 I, XI | Michael interrupted him.~“Perfectly unnecessary, sir; we already
9 I, XI | driver come back? He knows perfectly well that he has left us
10 I, XI | charming.”~Harry Blount, perfectly upright, stood, hat in hand,
11 I, XI | right!” he cried. “He is perfectly right, my dear fellow. It
12 I, XIV| them.~Michael Strogoff was perfectly acquainted with the town
13 II, III| these conditions it was perfectly impossible; so, not wishing
14 II, IV | pillages, its murders, had perfectly sickened them, and they
15 II, IV | reply Ivan Ogareff became perfectly livid.~“Who is this prisoner?”
16 II, V | Parisian reporter would be perfectly hardened to any scenic effect,
17 II, XII| was a clever engineer, was perfectly competent to direct a regular
18 II, XV | want of sight. We know how perfectly he acted the part he had
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