Book, Chapter
1 I, I | and for two months the Russian standard had been seen floating
2 I, II | least formidable was the Russian Count Timascheff. And although
3 I, IX | a stiff bow, and in his Russian accent replied: “First of
4 I, XIII | in blank astonishment. “Russian!” they gasped.~And true
5 I, XIV | replied the colonel.~The Russian and the Englishman mutually
6 I, XIV | Frenchmen to learn either Russian or English.~The formal preliminaries
7 I, XIV | grazed his nose, which, for a Russian’s, was unusually long. The
8 I, XIV | by her cannon, and if the Russian’s long nose came in the
9 I, XIV | the way of the ball, the Russian must submit to the mischance.~
10 I, XVI | count. “Why, there’s not a Russian could endure it!”~“I beg
11 I, XVII | heartiest of welcomes. The Russian sailors, ever superstitious,
12 I, XVII | one people now; no longer Russian, French, or English. Nationality
13 I, XIX | immediate proximity to the Russian yacht.~The consciousness
14 I, XIX | Timascheff, he added in Russian: “The governor has made
15 I, XIX | whether he speaks French, Russian, Spanish, German, or Italian,
16 I, XX | both Spanish majos and Russian sailors set to work with
17 I, XXI | good variety of French and Russian books; lamps were suspended
18 I, XXI | Nina. The Spaniards and the Russian sailors took up their sleeping-quarters
19 I, XXI | orders were given, four Russian sailors were sent on board,
20 I, XXI | taken place in Gallia. The Russian sailors exhibited some of
21 I, XXIII| desert of Sahara or the Russian steppes; the waters of the
22 I, XXIV | bosom; the Spaniards and the Russian sailors crowded round for
23 II, III | presented in succession: the Russian sailors, the Spaniards,
24 II, IV | of money, in English and Russian coinage, was in the possession
25 II, VIII | Infini, of which he had a Russian translation, and some other
26 II, IX | accompanied by Ben Zoof and two Russian sailors. “Good-morning,
27 II, XI | Gallia. Ben Zoof and the Russian cook had quite surpassed
28 II, XI | of sight completely. The Russian sailors, following a northern
29 II, XII | lieutenant’s direction the Russian sailors were immediately
30 II, XIV | security. Count Timascheff, a Russian nobleman, was evidently
31 II, XVII | Lieutenant Procope’s. The Russian sailors’ only thought was
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