Book, Chapter
1 I, IV | persons in the train, were merchants on their way to the celebrated
2 I, IV | beyond the Ural, and those merchants seemed to fear lest the
3 I, IV | been enough to restrain the merchants’ tongues. But in the compartment
4 I, IV | the first speaker, “these merchants have good reason for being
5 I, IV | recent events preoccupied the merchants of Nijni-Novgorod, and to
6 I, V | no, that cannot be; the merchants discussed before her the
7 I, V | the quarter of the wood merchants, the weavers’ quarter, the
8 I, V | their visitors. There were merchants from Central Asia, who had
9 I, VI | Zingaris, mingled with merchants from Persia, Turkey, India,
10 I, VII| of embroidery. All these merchants had been obliged to pile
11 I, XIV| devoted to the Siberian merchants, although, indeed, the trade
12 II, IV | notables the chief of the merchants of the town, the principal
13 II, XII| lastly, a mayor, chief of the merchants, and a person of some importance,
14 II, XII| in the defense. Soldiers, merchants, exiles, peasants, all devoted
15 II, XII| town, and the chief of the merchants, with several officers,
16 II, XII| said the chief of the merchants, “that we shall be ready
17 II, XII| said the chief of the merchants.~“Do so, sir.”~“I have more
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